Skip to yearly menu bar Skip to main content


( events)   Timezone:  
Workshop
Fri Dec 11 06:50 AM -- 04:50 PM (PST)
Causal Discovery and Causality-Inspired Machine Learning
Biwei Huang · Sara Magliacane · Kun Zhang · Danielle Belgrave · Elias Bareinboim · Daniel Malinsky · Thomas Richardson · Christopher Meek · Peter Spirtes · Bernhard Schölkopf





Workshop Home Page

Causality is a fundamental notion in science and engineering, and one of the fundamental problems in the field is how to find the causal structure or the underlying causal model. For instance, one focus of this workshop is on causal discovery, i.e., how can we discover causal structure over a set of variables from observational data with automated procedures? Another area of interest is how a causal perspective may help understand and solve advanced machine learning problems.

Recent years have seen impressive progress in theoretical and algorithmic developments of causal discovery from various types of data (e.g., from i.i.d. data, under distribution shifts or in nonstationary settings, under latent confounding or selection bias, or with missing data), as well as in practical applications (such as in neuroscience, climate, biology, and epidemiology). However, many practical issues, including confounding, the large scale of the data, the presence of measurement error, and complex causal mechanisms, are still to be properly addressed, to achieve reliable causal discovery in practice.

Moreover, causality-inspired machine learning (in the context of transfer learning, reinforcement learning, deep learning, etc.) leverages ideas from causality to improve generalization, robustness, interpretability, and sample efficiency and is attracting more and more interest in Machine Learning (ML) and Artificial Intelligence. Despite the benefit of the causal view in transfer learning and reinforcement learning, some tasks in ML, such as dealing with adversarial attacks and learning disentangled representations, are closely related to the causal view but are currently underexplored, and cross-disciplinary efforts may facilitate the anticipated progress.

This workshop aims to provide a forum for discussion for researchers and practitioners in machine learning, statistics, healthcare, and other disciplines to share their recent research in causal discovery and to explore the possibility of interdisciplinary collaboration. We also particularly encourage real applications, such as in neuroscience, biology, and climate science, of causal discovery methods.

*************
After each keynote, there will be 5 minutes for a live Q&A. You may post your questions in Rocket.Chat before or during the keynote time. The poster session and the virtual coffee break will be on Gather.Town. There is no Q&A for orals and spotlight talks, but all papers will attend the poster session and you can interact with authors there. More details will come soon.

Opening Remarks (Opening remarks)
Keynotes: Aapo Hyvärinen (Invited talk)
Keynotes: Clark Glymour (Invited talk)
Oral: Ashlynn Fuccello (Oral talk)
Coffee Break & Social on Gather.Town (Break)
Keynotes: James Robins (Invited talk)
Oral: Tineke Blom (Oral talk)
Oral: Karthikeyan Shanmugam (Oral talk)
Coffee Break & Social on Gather.Town (Break)
Spotlights 1 (Spotlight)
Poster Session 1 (Gather.Town) (poster session)
Coffee Break & Social on Gather.Town (Break)
Keynotes: Dominik Janzing (Invited talk)
Keynotes: Caroline Uhler (Invited talk)
Coffee Break & Social on Gather.Town (Break)
Keynotes: Karthika Mohan (Invited talk)
Oral: Ignavier Ng (Oral talk)
Coffee Break & Social on Gather.Town (Break)
Keynotes: Shohei Shimizu (Invited talk)
Spotlights 2 (Spotlight)
Poster Session 2 (Gather.Town) (poster session)
Closing Remarks (closing remarks)