Michael Hayes

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people who had smoked and then stopped reduced their risk by a factor of two. The consistency of all these results—more smoking leads to a higher risk of cancer, stopping leads to a lower risk—was another strong piece of evidence for causality. Doctors call it a “dose-response effect”: if substance A causes a biological effect B, then usually (though not always) a larger dose of A causes a stronger response B.
The Book of Why: The New Science of Cause and Effect (Penguin Science)
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