cover image: Non-robustness of Diffusion Estimates on Networks with Measurement Error

20.500.12592/2z350t0

Non-robustness of Diffusion Estimates on Networks with Measurement Error

14 Mar 2024

Network diffusion models are used to study things like disease transmission, information spread, and technology adoption. However, small amounts of mismeasurement are extremely likely in the networks constructed to operationalize these models. We show that estimates of diffusions are highly non-robust to this measurement error. First, we show that even when measurement error is vanishingly small, such that the share of missed links is close to zero, forecasts about the extent of diffusion will greatly underestimate the truth. Second, a small mismeasurement in the identity of the initial seed generates a large shift in the locations of expected diffusion path. We show that both of these results still hold when the vanishing measurement error is only local in nature. Such non-robustness in forecasting exists even under conditions where the basic reproductive number is consistently estimable. Possible solutions, such as estimating the measurement error or implementing widespread detection efforts, still face difficulties because the number of missed links are so small. Finally, we conduct Monte Carlo simulations on simulated networks, and real networks from three settings: travel data from the COVID-19 pandemic in the western US, a mobile phone marketing campaign in rural India, and in an insurance experiment in China.
econometrics macroeconomics microeconomics development economics monetary economics economics of information economic fluctuations and growth productivity, innovation, and entrepreneurship

Authors

Arun G. Chandrasekhar, Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham, Tyler McCormick, Samuel A. Thau, Jerry Wei

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We gratefully acknowledge Isaiah Andrews, Abhijit Banerjee, Haoge Chang, Jishnu Das, Matt Jackson, Ben Golub, Ed Kaplan, Julianne Meisner, Jim Moody, Karl Rohe, and Juan Pablo Xandri. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32251
Published in
United States of America

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