Modified treatment policies are a widely applicable class of interventions used to study the causal effects of continuous exposures. Approaches to evaluating their causal effects assume no interference, meaning that such effects cannot be learned from data in settings where the exposure of one unit affects the outcome of others, as is common in spatial or network data. We introduce a new class of intervention, induced modified treatment policies, which we show identify such causal effects in the presence of network interference. Building on recent developments in network causal inference, we provide flexible, semi-parametric efficient estimators of the identified statistical estimand. Simulation experiments demonstrate that an induced modified treatment policy can eliminate causal (or identification) bias resulting from interference. We use the methods developed to evaluate the effect of zero-emission vehicle uptake on air pollution in California, strengthening prior evidence.
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