What is it about?

We develop a causal decomposition framework that evaluates sequential, multi-deomain ("synergistic") interventions--e.g., improving access to high-performing schools and early Algebra I--so researchers can estimate how much the interventions would reduce racial disparities in math achievement. Because these settings feature complex interactions among group status, intervening factors, and confounders, we introduce a triply robust estimator (with GLM or machine learning) that is robust to multiple forms of model misspecification. We validate performance via simulation and apply the method to HSLS:09 data on Black, Hispanic, and White students to show how sequential equalization of opportunities can narrow disparities in math achievement.

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Why is it important?

1. Realistic policy design: Many disparities won't be reduced with a single intervention. Our method quantifies disparity reduction with sequential interventions. 2. Robust to model specification: The debiased machine learning (triply robust estimator with machine learning and cross-fitting) enables more reliable estimates in complex social data. 3. Practical guideline: Simulation studies offer practical guidance by model complexity and sample size. 4. Generalizability: Although demonstrated in education, the framework applies to other domains where multi-step interventions are needed.

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This page is a summary of: Causal decomposition analysis with synergistic interventions: A triply robust machine-learning approach to addressing multiple dimensions of social disparities., Psychological Methods, October 2025, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/met0000803.
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