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Specificity of Association in Epidemiology

Blanchard, Thomas (2022) Specificity of Association in Epidemiology. [Preprint]

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Abstract

The epidemiologist Bradford Hill famously argued that in epidemiology, specificity of association (roughly, the fact that an environmental or behavioral risk factor is associated with just one or at most a few medical outcomes) is strong evidence of causation. Prominent epidemiologists have dismissed Hill’s claim on the ground that it relies on a dubious `one-cause one effect’ model of disease causation. The paper examines this methodological controversy, and argues that specificity considerations do have a useful role to play in causal inference in epidemiology. More precisely, I argue that specificity considerations help solve a pervasive inferential problem in contemporary epidemiology: the problem of determining whether an exposure-outcome correlation might be due to confounding by a social factor. This examination of specificity has interesting consequences for our understanding of the methodology of epidemiology. It highlights how the methodology of epidemiology relies on local tools designed to address specific inference problems peculiar to the discipline, and shows that observational causal inference in epidemiology can proceed with little prior knowledge of the causal structure of the phenomenon investigated. I also argue that specificity of association cannot (despite claims to the contrary) be entirely explained in terms of Woodward’s well-known concept of “one-to-one” causal specificity. This is because specificity as understood by epidemiologists depends on whether and exposure (or outcome) is associated with a `heterogeneous’ set of variables. This dimension of heterogeneity is not captured in Woodward’s notion, but is crucial for understanding the evidential import of specificity of association.


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Item Type: Preprint
Creators:
CreatorsEmailORCID
Blanchard, Thomastblancha@uni-koeln.de0000-0001-5002-7517
Additional Information: Forthcoming in Synthese.
Keywords: Specificity of Association; Epidemiology; Causal Specificity; Causal Inference
Subjects: General Issues > Causation
Specific Sciences > Medicine > Epidemiology
Depositing User: Thomas Blanchard
Date Deposited: 13 Nov 2022 14:53
Last Modified: 13 Nov 2022 14:53
Item ID: 21404
DOI or Unique Handle: 10.1007/s11229-022-03944-z
Subjects: General Issues > Causation
Specific Sciences > Medicine > Epidemiology
Date: November 2022
URI: https://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/id/eprint/21404

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