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Financial price dynamics and pedestrian counterflows: A comparison of statistical stylized facts

Financial price dynamics and pedestrian counterflows: A comparison of statistical stylized facts | FuturICT Journal Publications | Scoop.it

Financial price dynamics and pedestrian counterflows: A comparison of statistical stylized facts

Daniel R. Parisi, Didier Sornette, and Dirk Helbing

Accepted Friday Dec 14, 2012

We propose and document the evidence for an analogy between the dynamics of granular counter-flows in the presence of bottlenecks or restrictions and financial price formation processes. Using extensive simulations, we find that the counter-flows of simulated pedestrians through a door display eight stylized facts observed in financial markets when the density around the door is compared with the logarithm of the price. Finding so many stylized facts is very rare indeed among all agent-based models of financial markets. The stylized properties are present already when the agents in the pedestrian model are assumed to display a zero-intelligent behavior. If agents are given decision-making capacity and adapt to partially follow the majority, periods of herding behavior may additionally occur. This generates the very slow decay of the autocorrelation of absolute return due to an intermittent dynamics. Our finding suggest that the stylized facts in the fluctuations of the financial prices result from a competition of two groups with opposite interests in the presence of a constraint funneling the flow of transactions to a narrow band of prices with limited liquidity.

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JSTOR: A Global System for Monitoring Ecosystem Service Change

JSTOR: A Global System for Monitoring Ecosystem Service Change | FuturICT Journal Publications | Scoop.it

"A Global System for Monitoring Ecosystem Service Change

 

Dr. Heather M. Tallis, Dr. Harold A Mooney, Dr. Sandy J Andelman,, Dr. Patricia Balvenera, Prof. Wolfgang Cramer, Mr. Daniel Karp, Prof. Stephen Polasky, Dr. Belinda Reyers, Dr. Taylor Ricketts, Prof. Steven Running,, Dr. Kirsten Thonicke, Britta Tietjen and Ariane Walz

 

Earth’s life-support systems are in flux, yet no centralized system to monitor and report these changes exists. Recognizing this, 77 nations agreed to establish the Group on Earth Observations (GEO). The GEO Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO BON) integrates existing data streams into one platform in order to provide a more complete picture of Earth’s biological and social systems. We present a conceptual framework envisioned by the GEO BON Ecosystem Services Working Group, designed to integrate national statistics, numerical models, remote sensing, and in situ measurements to regularly track changes in ecosystem services across the globe. This information will serve diverse applications, including stimulating new research and providing the basis for assessments. Although many ecosystem services are not currently measured, others are ripe for reporting. We propose a framework that will continue to grow and inspire more complete observation and assessments of our planet’s life-support systems."

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