262 research outputs found
Inferring short-term volatility indicators from Bitcoin blockchain
In this paper, we study the possibility of inferring early warning indicators
(EWIs) for periods of extreme bitcoin price volatility using features obtained
from Bitcoin daily transaction graphs. We infer the low-dimensional
representations of transaction graphs in the time period from 2012 to 2017
using Bitcoin blockchain, and demonstrate how these representations can be used
to predict extreme price volatility events. Our EWI, which is obtained with a
non-negative decomposition, contains more predictive information than those
obtained with singular value decomposition or scalar value of the total Bitcoin
transaction volume
Static Chaos in Spin Glasses against quenched disorder perturbations
We study the chaotic nature of spin glasses against perturbations of the
realization of the quenched disorder. This type of perturbation modifies the
energy landscape of the system without adding extensive energy. We exactly
solve the mean-field case, which displays a very similar chaos to that observed
under magnetic field perturbations, and discuss the possible extension of these
results to the case of short-ranged models. It appears that dimension four
plays the role of a specific critical dimension where mean-field theory is
valid. We present numerical simulation results which support our main
conclusions.Comment: 13 Pages + 7 Figures, Latex File, figures uuencoded at end of fil
Regularizing Portfolio Optimization
The optimization of large portfolios displays an inherent instability to
estimation error. This poses a fundamental problem, because solutions that are
not stable under sample fluctuations may look optimal for a given sample, but
are, in effect, very far from optimal with respect to the average risk. In this
paper, we approach the problem from the point of view of statistical learning
theory. The occurrence of the instability is intimately related to over-fitting
which can be avoided using known regularization methods. We show how
regularized portfolio optimization with the expected shortfall as a risk
measure is related to support vector regression. The budget constraint dictates
a modification. We present the resulting optimization problem and discuss the
solution. The L2 norm of the weight vector is used as a regularizer, which
corresponds to a diversification "pressure". This means that diversification,
besides counteracting downward fluctuations in some assets by upward
fluctuations in others, is also crucial because it improves the stability of
the solution. The approach we provide here allows for the simultaneous
treatment of optimization and diversification in one framework that enables the
investor to trade-off between the two, depending on the size of the available
data set
Gaussian Approximation Potentials: the accuracy of quantum mechanics, without the electrons
We introduce a class of interatomic potential models that can be
automatically generated from data consisting of the energies and forces
experienced by atoms, derived from quantum mechanical calculations. The
resulting model does not have a fixed functional form and hence is capable of
modeling complex potential energy landscapes. It is systematically improvable
with more data. We apply the method to bulk carbon, silicon and germanium and
test it by calculating properties of the crystals at high temperatures. Using
the interatomic potential to generate the long molecular dynamics trajectories
required for such calculations saves orders of magnitude in computational cost.Comment: v3-4: added new material and reference
Chaos in the Random Field Ising Model
The sensitivity of the random field Ising model to small random perturbations
of the quenched disorder is studied via exact ground states obtained with a
maximum-flow algorithm. In one and two space dimensions we find a mild form of
chaos, meaning that the overlap of the old, unperturbed ground state and the
new one is smaller than one, but extensive. In three dimensions the
rearrangements are marginal (concentrated in the well defined domain walls).
Implications for finite temperature variations and experiments are discussed.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 6 eps-figures include
Chaos and Universality in a Four-Dimensional Spin Glass
We present a finite size scaling analysis of Monte Carlo simulation results
on a four dimensional Ising spin glass. We study chaos with both coupling and
temperature perturbations, and find the same chaos exponent in each case. Chaos
is investigated both at the critical temperature and below where it seems to be
more efficient (larger exponent). Dimension four seems to be above the critical
dimension where chaos with temperature is no more present in the critical
region. Our results are consistent with the Gaussian and bimodal coupling
distributions being in the same universality class.Comment: 11 pages, including 6 postscript figures. Latex with revtex macro
Magnetic field chaos in the SK Model
We study the Sherrington--Kirkpatrick model, both above and below the De
Almeida Thouless line, by using a modified version of the Parallel Tempering
algorithm in which the system is allowed to move between different values of
the magnetic field h. The behavior of the probability distribution of the
overlap between two replicas at different values of the magnetic field h_0 and
h_1 gives clear evidence for the presence of magnetic field chaos already for
moderate system sizes, in contrast to the case of temperature chaos, which is
not visible on system sizes that can currently be thermalized.Comment: Latex, 16 pages including 20 postscript figure
The mean field theory of spin glasses: the heuristic replica approach and recent rigorous results
The mathematically correct computation of the spin glasses free energy in the
infinite range limit crowns 25 years of mathematic efforts in solving this
model. The exact solution of the model was found many years ago by using a
heuristic approach; the results coming from the heuristic approach were crucial
in deriving the mathematical results. The mathematical tools used in the
rigorous approach are quite different from those of the heuristic approach. In
this note we will review the heuristic approach to spin glasses in the light of
the rigorous results; we will also discuss some conjectures that may be useful
to derive the solution of the model in an alternative way.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure; lecture at the Flato Colloquia Day, Thursday 27
November, 200
Temperature evolution and bifurcations of metastable states in mean-field spin glasses, with connections with structural glasses
The correlations of the free-energy landscape of mean-field spin glasses at
different temperatures are investigated, concentrating on models with a first
order freezing transition. Using a ``potential function'' we follow the
metastable states of the model in temperature, and discuss the possibility of
level crossing (which we do not find) and multifurcation (which we find). The
dynamics at a given temperature starting from an equilibrium configuration at a
different temperature is also discussed. In presence of multifurcation, we find
that the equilibrium is never achieved, leading to aging behaviour at slower
energy levels than usual aging. The relevance of the observed mechanisms for
real structural glasses is discussed, and some numerical simulations of a soft
sphere model of glass are presented.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, 10 figures (12 postscript files
Shifts and widths of collective excitations in trapped Bose gases by the dielectric formalism
We present predictions for the temperature dependent shifts and damping
rates. They are obtained by applying the dielectric formalism to a simple model
of a trapped Bose gas. Within the framework of the model we use lowest order
perturbation theory to determine the first order correction to the results of
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov-Popov theory for the complex collective excitation
frequencies, and present numerical results for the temperature dependence of
the damping rates and the frequency shifts. Good agreement with the
experimental values measured at JILA are found for the m=2 mode, while we find
disagreements in the shifts for m=0. The latter point to the necessity of a
non-perturbative treatment for an explanation of the temperature-dependence of
the m=0 shifts.Comment: 10 pages revtex, 3 figures in postscrip
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