Comparar métodos
Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.
| Experimento Natural Adaptativo× | Diferenças em Diferenças (DiD)× | |
|---|---|---|
| Área≠ | Delineamento experimental | Econometria |
| Família≠ | Process / pipeline | Regression model |
| Ano de origem≠ | 2000s–2010s (systematic application in policy and social science evaluation) | 1994 |
| Autor original≠ | Synthesizes natural experiment tradition (Meyer 1995; Dunning 2012) with adaptive design principles (Wald 1947; Chow & Chang 2008) | Card & Krueger (canonical 1994 application); Angrist & Pischke (textbook treatment) |
| Tipo≠ | Quasi-experimental adaptive research design | Causal inference / panel regression |
| Fonte seminal≠ | Dunning, T. (2012). Natural Experiments in the Social Sciences: A Design-Based Approach. Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 978-1107698000 | Angrist, J. D., & Pischke, J.-S. (2009). Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist's Companion. Princeton University Press. ISBN: 978-0691120355 |
| Outros nomes≠ | adaptive quasi-experiment, adaptive exogenous shock design, adaptive as-if randomization, sequential natural experiment | diff-in-diff, DiD, Farkların Farkı (Diff-in-Diff) |
| Relacionados≠ | 4 | 5 |
| Resumo≠ | An adaptive natural experiment combines the causal logic of the natural experiment — exploiting real-world events that assign individuals to conditions in a plausibly exogenous way — with pre-specified adaptive monitoring rules that allow the analytic protocol to be modified based on accumulating data. This hybrid design is used in economics, epidemiology, and policy evaluation when the natural event unfolds over time and interim evidence can legitimately inform decisions about data collection scope, subgroup focus, or analytic strategy without compromising causal validity. | Difference-in-Differences is a causal-inference method that estimates the effect of an intervention by comparing how a treatment group and a control group change over time. Made famous by Card and Krueger's 1994 minimum-wage study and developed in Angrist and Pischke's Mostly Harmless Econometrics, it isolates the treatment effect as the difference between the two groups' before-after changes. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de dados ↗ |
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