I am happy to announce the publication of my book "Causality, Probability, and 
Time" (Cambridge  University Press, 2012).

Causality is a key part of many fields and facets of life, from finding the 
relationship between diet and disease to discovering the reason for a 
particular stock market crash. Despite centuries of work in philosophy and 
decades of computational research, automated inference and explanation remains 
an open problem. In particular, the timing and complexity of relationships has 
been largely ignored even though this information is critically important for 
prediction, explanation, and intervention. However, given the growing 
availability of large observational datasets, including those from electronic 
health records and social networks, it is a practical necessity. This book 
presents a new approach to inference (finding relationships from a set of data) 
and explanation (assessing why a particular event occurred), addressing both 
the timing and complexity of relationships. The practical use of the method 
developed is illustrated through theoretical and experimental case studies, d
 emonstrating its feasibility and success.

More information on the book can be found at:
http://www.cs.stevens.edu/~skleinbe/causality_book/index.html


Endorsements:

"This new book on causality is a wonderful combination surveying past work and 
moving on to develop useful new concepts such as probabilistic temporal logic 
to give new definitions and results about the nature of causes. Formal theorems 
and practical case studies about causality are given equally detailed 
attention." --Patrick Suppes, Stanford University

"This book presents an exciting new approach to causality based on temporal 
logic. Kleinberg does an excellent job in integrating a thorough understanding 
of present-day philosophical approaches to causality with formal and 
computational considerations, to deliver an approach that is both well 
motivated and practically oriented. It is recommended to those interested in 
theories of causality as well as those concerned with the practice of causal 
inference." --Jon Williamson, University of Kent
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