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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/60940


    Title: Microstructure Dynamics and Agent-based Financial Markets: Can Dinosaurs Return?
    Authors: Kampouridis,Michael;Chen,Shu-Heng;Tsang,Edward
    Contributors: 政大經濟系
    Keywords: Genetic programming;self-organizing feature map;market microstructure;market behavior dynamics;dinosaur hypothesis
    Date: 2012-09
    Issue Date: 2013-09-16 17:27:37 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: This paper formalizes observations made under agent-based artificial stock market models into a concrete hypothesis, which is called the Dinosaur Hypothesis. This hypothesis states that the behavior of financial markets constantly changes and that the trading strategies in a market need to continuously co-evolve with it in order to remain effective. After formalizing the hypothesis, we suggest a testing methodology and run tests under 10 international financial markets. Our tests are based on a framework that we recently developed, which used Genetic Programming as a rule inference engine, and Self-Organizing Maps as a clustering machine for the above rules. However, an important assumption of that study was that maps among different periods were directly comparable with each other. In order to allow this to happen, we had to keep the same clusters throughout the different time periods of our experiments. Nevertheless, this assumption could be considered as strict or even unrealistic. In this paper, we relax this assumption. This makes our model more realistic. In addition, this allows us to investigate in depth the dynamics of market behavior and test for the plausibility of the Dinosaur Hypothesis. The results show that indeed markets` behavior constantly changes. As a consequence, strategies need to continuously co-evolve with the market; if they do not, they become obsolete or dinosaurs.
    Relation: Advances in Complex Systems, 15(5), 1250060-1-1250060-27
    Data Type: article
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Economics] Periodical Articles

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