YSPH Biostatistics Virtual Seminar: "Designing Randomized Trials To Understand Treatment Effect Heterogeneity"
SPEAKER: Elizabeth Tipton, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Statistics, Northwestern University
TITLE: Designing Randomized Trials To Understand Treatment Effect Heterogeneity
ABSTRACT: Randomized trials are now common in medicine, the social sciences, and in policy related research. The primary goal of a randomized trial is to estimate the average treatment effect, which averages over unit-specific treatment impacts that might be quite heterogenous. Often the results of such a trial are to be used for making policy or practice decisions in a target population; this, paired with the fact that most such trials take place in samples of convenience, has led to an increased interest in methods for generalizing causal effects. This has included new methods for estimation of average treatment effects that take into account population data, as well as methods for designing sampling and recruitment strategies for such studies. But if treatment effects actually vary, often researchers seek to understand if such heterogeneity can be predicted or explained by unit characteristics. In this talk, I focus on this sampling problem in the face of heterogeneity. I show that by methods for optimal designs found in response surface models can be useful, too, in designing sampling plans that result in increased power and precision for these moderator effects. I situate this in an example based on an evaluation of a school-based reading program.
Speaker
Northwestern University
Elizabeth Tipton, PhDAssociate Professor