Global Average Treatment Effects for Individualized Randomization Experiments with Aggregate Data

Abstract

Individualized randomized experiments are central to online platforms for optimizing personalized decisions in complex environments. In two-sided markets, however, standard treatment effect estimation is often invalid due to strong temporal and cross-unit interference, a challenge compounded when only aggregated data are available because of privacy or system constraints. To address these issues, we identify the Global Average Treatment Effect (GATE) using only group-level data from treatment and control groups. We first establish identification conditions based on aggregated observations, and then propose the Individualized Randomized Experiment Varying Coefficient Decision Process (IRE-VCDP) model, which accounts for interference through supply-demand dynamics. Building on this framework, we develop a complete procedure for estimation and statistical inference of the GATE, along with theoretical guarantees for the proposed test. Extensive simulations and real-world experiments using data from a leading ridesharing platform demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.

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