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arxiv: 1102.2620 · v1 · pith:2ANC7F6Rnew · submitted 2011-02-13 · 💱 q-fin.ST · cs.SI· physics.soc-ph

Predicting economic market crises using measures of collective panic

classification 💱 q-fin.ST cs.SIphysics.soc-ph
keywords paniccrisescrisiseconomicexternalhighlevelsmarket
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Predicting panic is of critical importance in many areas of human and animal behavior, notably in the context of economics. The recent financial crisis is a case in point. Panic may be due to a specific external threat, or self-generated nervousness. Here we show that the recent economic crisis and earlier large single-day panics were preceded by extended periods of high levels of market mimicry --- direct evidence of uncertainty and nervousness, and of the comparatively weak influence of external news. High levels of mimicry can be a quite general indicator of the potential for self-organized crises.

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