Experimental econophysics : properties and mechanisms of laboratory markets
著者
書誌事項
Experimental econophysics : properties and mechanisms of laboratory markets
(New economic windows)
Springer, c2015
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全3件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Bibliography: p. 185-192
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Experimental Econophysics describes the method of controlled human experiments, which is developed by physicists to study some problems in economics or finance, namely, stylized facts, fluctuation phenomena, herd behavior, contrarian behavior,
hedge behavior, cooperation, business cycles, partial information, risk management, and stock prediction. Experimental econophysics together with empirical econophysics are two branches of the field of econophysics. The latter one has been
extensively discussed in the existing books, while the former one has been seldom touched. In this book, the author will focus on the branch of experimental econophysics.
Empirical econophysics is based on the analysis of data in real markets by using some statistical tools borrowed from traditional statistical physics. Differently, inspired by the role of controlled experiments and system modelling (for computer simulations and/or analytical theory) in developing modern physics, experimental econophysics specially relies on controlled human experiments in the laboratory (producing data for analysis) together with agent-based modelling (for computer simulations and/or analytical theory), with an aim at revealing the general
cause-effect relationship between specific parameters and emergent properties of real economic/financial markets. This book covers the basic concepts, experimental methods, modelling approaches, and latest progress in the field of experimental
econophysics.
目次
Introduction.- Fundamentals.- Stylized facts: Scaling Law and Clustering Behavior.- Fluctuation Phenomena: Leverage Could be Positive and Negative.- Herd Behavior: Beyond the Known Ruinous Role.- Contrarian Behavior: Beyond the Known Helpful Role.- Hedge Behavior: Statistical Equivalence of Different Systems.- Cooperation: Spontaneous Emergence of the Invisible Hand.- Business Cycles: Competition between Suppliers and Consumers.- Partial Information: Equivalent to Complete Information.- Risk Management: Unusual Risk-Return Relationship.- Prediction: Pure Technical Analysis Might not Work Satisfactorily.- Summary and outlook.- Appendix.
「Nielsen BookData」 より