Personalized treatment aims at tailoring treatments to individual characteristics. An important step is to understand how a treatment effect varies across individual characteristics, known as the conditional average treatment effect (CATE). In this study, we make robust inferences of the CATE from observational data, which becomes challenging with a multivariate confounder. To reduce the curse of dimensionality, while keeping the nonparametric advantages, we propose double dimension reductions that achieve different goal. First, we identify the central mean subspace of the CATE directly using dimension reduction in order to detect the most accurate and parsimonious structure of the CATE. Second, we use a nonparametric regression with a prior dimension reduction to impute counterfactual outcomes, which helps to improve the stability of the imputation. We establish the asymptotic properties of the proposed estimator, taking into account the two-step double dimension reduction, and propose an effective bootstrapping procedure without bootstrapping the estimated central mean subspace to make valid inferences. A simulation and applications show that the proposed estimator outperforms existing competitors.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678379PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5705/ss.202020.0409DOI Listing

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