Litcius/Paper detail

A Theory of Experimenters: Robustness, Randomization, and Balance

Abhijit V. Banerjee, Sylvain Chassang, Sergio Montero, Erik Snowberg

2020American Economic Review78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper studies the problem of experiment design by an ambiguity-averse decision-maker who trades off subjective expected performance against robust performance guarantees. This framework accounts for real-world experimenters’ preference for randomization. It also clarifies the circumstances in which randomization is optimal: when the available sample size is large and robustness is an important concern. We apply our model to shed light on the practice of rerandomization, used to improve balance across treatment and control groups. We show that rerandomization creates a trade-off between subjective performance and robust performance guarantees. However, robust performance guarantees diminish very slowly with the number of rerandomizations. This suggests that moderate levels of rerandomization usefully expand the set of acceptable compromises between subjective performance and robustness. Targeting a fixed quantile of balance is safer than targeting an absolute balance objective. (JEL C90, D81)

Topics & Concepts

Robustness (evolution)AmbiguityQuantileEconomicsEconometricsDecision makerSAFERComputer scienceBalance (ability)RandomizationSample size determinationPreferenceMicroeconomicsMathematicsStatisticsRandomized controlled trialPsychologyManagement scienceMedicineBiochemistryNeuroscienceGeneProgramming languageComputer securitySurgeryChemistryAdvanced Causal Inference TechniquesStatistical Methods in Clinical TrialsDecision-Making and Behavioral Economics