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Estimating heterogeneous treatment effects with item-level data: Insights from Item Response Theory

Wed Apr 02
2025
10 am - 11 am ET

A PRIISM Seminar by Harvard's Joshua Gilbert

Join PRIISM and Josh Gilbert to learn how to unmask hidden treatment effects within individual test items using Item Response Theory and to understand how to overcome the limitations of traditional single-score analyses.

Abstract

Analyses of heterogeneous treatment effects (HTE) are common in applied causal inference research. However, when outcomes are latent variables assessed via psychometric instruments such as educational tests, standard methods ignore the potential HTE that may exist among the individual items of the outcome measure. Failing to account for "item-level" HTE (IL-HTE) can lead to both underestimated standard errors and identification challenges in the estimation of treatment-by-covariate interaction effects. We demonstrate how Item Response Theory (IRT) models that estimate a treatment effect for each assessment item can both address these challenges and provide new insights into HTE generally. This study articulates the theoretical rationale for the IL-HTE model and demonstrates its practical value using 75 datasets from 48 randomized controlled trials containing 5.8 million item responses in economics, education, and health research. Our results show that the IL-HTE model reveals item-level variation masked by single-number scores, provides more meaningful standard errors in many settings, allows for estimates of the generalizability of causal effects to untested items, resolves identification problems in the estimation of interaction effects, and provides estimates of standardized treatment effect sizes corrected for attenuation due to measurement error.

Joshua Gilbert

Bio

Joshua Gilbert(link is external) is pursuing a PhD in Education at Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) in the Education Policy and Program Evaluation (EPPE) concentration. His advisors are Dr. James Kim and Dr. Luke Miratrix. He is in his third year.

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