Part of Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 36 (NeurIPS 2023) Main Conference Track
Fateme Jamshidi, Sina Akbari, Negar Kiyavash
Drawbacks of ignoring the causal mechanisms when performing imitation learning have recently been acknowledged. Several approaches both to assess the feasibility of imitation and to circumvent causal confounding and causal misspecifications have been proposed in the literature.However, the potential benefits of the incorporation of additional information about the underlying causal structure are left unexplored.An example of such overlooked information is context-specific independence (CSI), i.e., independence that holds only in certain contexts.We consider the problem of causal imitation learning when CSI relations are known.We prove that the decision problem pertaining to the feasibility of imitation in this setting is NP-hard.Further, we provide a necessary graphical criterion for imitation learning under CSI and show that under a structural assumption, this criterion is also sufficient.Finally, we propose a sound algorithmic approach for causal imitation learning which takes both CSI relations and data into account.