The pattern graph framework solves a wide range of missing data problems with nonignorable mechanisms. However, it faces two challenges of assess ability and interpretability, particularly important in safety-critical problems such as clinical diagnosis: (i) How can one assess the validity of the framework's a priori assumption and make necessary adjustments to accommodate known information about the problem? (ii) How can one interpret the process of exponential tilting used for sensitivity analysis in the pattern graph framework and choose the tilt perturbations based on meaningful real-world quantities? In this paper, we introduce Informed Sensitivity Analysis, an extension of the pattern graph framework that enables us to incorporate substantive knowledge about the missingness mechanism into the pattern graph framework. Our extension allows us to examine the validity of assumptions underlying pattern graphs and interpret sensitivity analysis results in terms of realistic problem characteristics. We apply our method to a prevalent nonignorable missing data scenario in clinical research. We validate and compare our method's results of our method with a number of widely-used missing data methods, including Unweighted CCA, KNN Imputer, MICE, and MissForest. The validation is done using both boot-strapped simulated experiments as well as real-world clinical observations in the MIMIC-III public dataset.
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The pattern graph framework solves a wide range of missing data problems with nonignorable mechanisms. However, it faces two challenges of assess ability and interpretability, particularly important in safety-critical problems such as clinical diagnosis: (i) How can one assess the validity of the framework's a priori assumption and make necessary adjustments to accommodate known information about the problem? (ii) How can one interpret the process of exponential tilting used for sensitivity anal...
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