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Seminar “Causal Inference, Causal Discovery, and Machine Learning”

Published: November 30, 2022; Author: Julia Sonrisa

 December 8, 2022    03:00 PM-04:00 PM EDT

Address: 2276 12th Avenue, Room 206, New York, NY 10027, United States

Seminar “Causal Inference, Causal Discovery, and Machine Learning”

Abstract: In the past decade machine learning has had a rapidly growing impact on many fields of natural-, life- and social sciences as well as engineering. Machine learning excels at classification and regression tasks from complex heterogeneous datasets and can answer questions like “What statistical associations or correlations can we see in the data?”, “What objects are in this picture?”, or “What is the most likely next data point?”. But many questions in science, engineering, and politics are about “What are the causal relations underlying the data?” or “What if a certain variable changes or is changed?” or “What would have happened if some variable had another value?”. Data-driven machine learning alone fails to answer such questions. Causal inference provides the theory and methods to learn and utilize qualitative knowledge about causal relations. Together with machine learning, it enables causal reasoning given complex data. Furthermore, causal methods can be used to intercompare and validate physical simulation models. In this talk, I will present an overview of this exciting and widely applicable framework and illustrate it with some examples from Earth sciences and beyond.

Bio: Jakob Runge heads the Causal Inference group at the German Aerospace Center’s Institute of Data Science in Jena since 2017 and is guest professor of computer science at TU Berlin since 2021. His group combines innovative data science methods from different fields (graphical models, causal inference, nonlinear dynamics, deep learning) and closely works with experts in the climate sciences and beyond. Jakob studied physics at Humboldt University Berlin and finished his PhD project at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in 2014. For his studies he was funded by the German National Foundation (Studienstiftung) and his thesis was awarded the Carl-Ramsauer prize by the Berlin Physical Society. In 2014 he won a $200.000 Fellowship Award in Studying Complex Systems by the James S. McDonnell Foundation and joined the Grantham Institute, Imperial College London, from 2016 to 2017. In 2020 he won an ERC Starting Grant with his interdisciplinary project CausalEarth. On https://github.com/jakobrunge/tigramite.git he provides Tigramite, a time series analysis python module for causal inference. For more details, see the website.

Speaker: Jakob Runge

Time: 3:00 p.m.

Format: Hybrid

Virtual: Zoom link provided upon registration

In-person: Columbia Innovation Hub, 2276 12th Avenue, Second Floor, Room 202, New York, NY 10027

*Please note that in-person space is limited*

Free!

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