Predicting Census Survey Response Rates via Interpretable Nonparametric Additive Models with Structured Interactions


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Accurate and interpretable prediction of survey response rates is important from an operational standpoint. The US Census Bureaus well-known ROAM application uses principled statistical models trained on the US Census Planning Database data to identify hard-to-survey areas. An earlier crowdsourcing competition revealed that an ensemble of regression trees led to the best performance in predicting survey response rates; however, the corresponding models could not be adopted for the intended application due to limited interpretability. In this paper, we present new interpretable statistical methods to predict, with high accuracy, response rates in surveys. We study sparse nonparametric additive models with pairwise interactions via $ell_0$-regularization, as well as hierarchically structured variants that provide enhanced interpretability. Despite strong methodological underpinnings, such models can be computationally challenging -- we present new scalable algorithms for learning these models. We also establish novel non-asymptotic error bounds for the proposed estimators. Experiments based on the US Census Planning Database demonstrate that our methods lead to high-quality predictive models that permit actionable interpretability for different segments of the population. Interestingly, our methods provide significant gains in interpretability without losing in predictive performance to state-of-the-art black-box machine learning methods based on gradient boosting and feedforward neural networks. Our code implementation in python is available at https://github.com/ShibalIbrahim/Additive-Models-with-Structured-Interactions.

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