Standard economic theory assumes that agents in markets behave rationally.
However, the observation of extremely large fluctuations in the price of
financial assets that are not correlated to changes in their fundamental value,
as well as the extreme instance of financial bubbles and crashes, imply that
markets (at least occasionally) do display irrational behavior. In this paper,
we briefly outline our recent work demonstrating that a market with interacting
agents having bounded rationality can display price fluctuations that are {\em
quantitatively} similar to those seen in real markets.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Proceedings of International Workshop
on "Econophysics of Stock Markets and Minority Games" (Econophys-Kolkata II),
Feb 14-17, 200