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Response to Tahir et al.’s commentary on our BSRS causal framework for longitudinal well-being data

Pingfan Wang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalLetterpeer-review

Abstract

We thank Tahir et al. for their respectful and constructive commentary on our article proposing the Behaviour Self-Regulation Score (BSRS) and a causally-informed workflow for longitudinal self-report well-being data (Wang et al., 2026). We clarify that (i) the completeness threshold was established a priori to support stable estimation, and we reported included-versus-excluded baseline comparisons showing no statistically significant differences on key measured variables; (ii) while treatment- and outcome-related items were collected via an evening daily questionnaire, we defined day-level temporal ordering and stated identification assumptions; and (iii) our causal interpretation is conditional on standard assumptions, which we complemented with exposure-specific backdoor adjustment and three refutation checks (random common cause, placebo permutation, and data-subset stability), while transparently noting remaining limitations including self-report bias and potential time-varying confounding. We welcome the opportunity to clarify these points in response to the Letter to the Editor.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105037
JournalJournal of Biomedical Informatics
Volume178
Early online date7 Apr 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2026

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