With the usual #statistician's caveat that #causality is really hard to sort out in data like this even with good #controls ... yes, I believe this. And the #mechanisms aren't hard to find, either. 😐
@freemo Sure, causal inference, largely from time series data and/or Mendelian randomization, is a big part of my work. The methods as described in the article don't seem to be Granger or SEM, though. Of course one should never rely on popular science reporting for a thorough understanding of methods. 😀 I'd have to read the paper to be sure.
Because I loathe the blithe use of "correlation is not causation" to dismiss legitimate causal inference results, I want to see researchers being really careful when making causal claims from observational data. _If_ they met that standard here, good for them.
@medigoth Good, then we mostly agree.
That said correlation only shows correlation I think we all agree it **never** is evidence in and of itself of causation, for that wee either 1) need to control all variables in a lab setting (usually not possible) or 2) use other methods that can demonstrate (or at least suggest) causation... By the sound of it we agree here as well.