Title: Summary of previous lectures
1Summary of previous lectures
- How to treat markets which exhibit normal
behaviour (lecture 2). - Looked at evidence that stock markets were not
always normal, stationary nor in equilibrium
(lecture 1). - Is it possible to model non-normal markets?
2From individual behaviour to market dynamics
- Describe how individuals interact with each
other. - Predict the global dynamics of the markets.
- Test whether these assumptions and predictions
are consistent with reality.
3El-Farol bar problem
- Consider a bar which has a music night every
Thursday. We define a payoff function, f(x)k-x,
which measures the satisfaction of individuals
at the bar attended by a total of x patrons. - The population consists of n individuals. What do
we expect the stable patronage of the bar to be?
4Perfectly rational solution
5El-Farol bar problem
- Imperfect information you only know if you got a
table or not. - You gather information from the experience of
others.
6El-Farol bar problem
- If you find your own table then tell b others
about the bar. If you have to fight over a
table then dont come back - Interaction function
Schelling (1978) Micromotives and Macrobehaviour
7Simulations of bar populations
b6
Beach visitors (at )
time
n4000 sites at the beach
Bk1000 b6
8Simulations of bar populations
b6
Beach visitors (at )
time
n4000 sites at the beach
Bk1000 b8
9Simulations of bar populations
b6
Beach visitors (at )
time
n4000 sites at the beach
Bk1000 b20
10A derivation
- Interaction function
- The mean population on the next generation is
given by - where pk is the probability that k individuals
choose a particular site. - If pk is totally random (i.e. indiviudals are
Poisson distributed) then
11b6
at1
at
12Simulations of bar populations
b6
Beach visitors (at )
time
n4000 sites at the beach
Bk1000 b6
13Simulations of bar populations
b6
Beach visitors (at )
time
n4000 sites at the beach
Bk1000 b8
14Simulations of bar populations
b6
Beach visitors (at )
time
n4000 sites at the beach
Bk1000 b20
15Period doubling route to chaos
16Are stock markets chaotic?
17Are stock markets chaotic?
Not really like the distributions we saw in
lectue 1.
18El-Farol bar problem
Arthur 1994
19El-Farol bar problem
Arthur 1994
20El-Farol bar problem
Arthur 1994
21Minority game
Brain size is number of bits in signal (3)
Challet and Zhang 1997
22Minority game
Challet and Zhang 1997
23Minority game
Challet and Zhang 1998
24Break
25Do humans copy each other?
26Aschs experiment
Asch (1955) Scientific American
27Aschs experiment
Asch (1955) Scientific American
28Aschs experiment
Asch (1955) Scientific American
29Milgrams experiment
30Milgrams experiment
Hale (2008)
31Milgrams experiment
Milgram Toch (1969)
32Irrationality in financial experts
- Keynes beauty contest
- Behaviuoral economics (framing, mental
accounting, overconfidence etc.). Thaler,
Kahneman, Tversky etc. - Herding? (less experimental evidence)
33Consequences of copying
34Summary
- Markets can be captured by some simple models.
- These models in themselves exhibit complex and
chaotic behaviours. - In pariticular, models of positive feedback could
be used to explain certain crashes.