Econophysics

From Citizendium
Revision as of 08:09, 2 January 2007 by imported>Joseph Rushton Wakeling (Edit to intro.)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Econophysics and the closely-related field of sociophysics are areas of interdisciplinary research using methods and techniques from physics to model economic and other social phenomena respectively. Although examples can be found dating back some way into the literature, both fields came to prominence in the 1990s in response to a number of factors, including perceived crises in traditional economic methodology and analysis, the interest from the finance industry in employing trained physicists as quantitative analysts, and the complex patterns observed in the newly-available high-frequency financial data, which suggested links to various recent developments in statistical mechanics.

[1] [2]

External links

References

Notes

  1. Stanley, H. E. et al. (1996). "Anomalous fluctuations in the dynamics of complex systems: from DNA and physiology to econophysics". Physica A 224: 302–321. DOI:10.1016/0378-4371(95)00409-2. Research Blogging.
  2. Galam, S., Gefen, Y. and Shapir, Y. (1982). "Sociophysics: a new approach of sociological collective behaviour. I. Mean-behaviour description of a strike". Journal of Mathematical Sociology 9: 1–13.

Bibliography