Difference between revisions of "Quantifying Wikipedia Usage Patterns Before Stock Market Moves"

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'''Quantifying Wikipedia Usage Patterns Before Stock Market Moves''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2013, written by Chester Curme, Adam Avakian, Dror Y. Kenett, H. Eugene Stanley and Tobias Preis.
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'''Quantifying Wikipedia Usage Patterns Before Stock Market Moves''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2013, written by [[Chester Curme]], [[Adam Avakian]], [[Dror Y. Kenett]], [[H. Eugene Stanley]] and [[Tobias Preis]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
Financial crises result from a catastrophic combination of actions. Vast stock market datasets offer us a window into some of the actions that have led to these crises. Here, authors investigate whether data generated through Internet usage contain traces of attempts to gather information before trading decisions were taken. Authors present evidence in line with the intriguing suggestion that data on changes in how often financially related Wikipedia pages were viewed may have contained early signs of stock market moves. Authors results suggest that online data may allow us to gain new insight into early information gathering stages of decision making.
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Financial crises result from a catastrophic combination of actions. Vast stock market datasets offer us a window into some of the actions that have led to these crises. Here, authors investigate whether data generated through Internet usage contain traces of attempts to gather information before trading decisions were taken. Authors present evidence in line with the intriguing suggestion that data on changes in how often financially related [[Wikipedia]] pages were viewed may have contained early signs of stock market moves. Authors results suggest that online data may allow us to gain new insight into early information gathering stages of decision making.

Revision as of 07:40, 26 July 2019

Quantifying Wikipedia Usage Patterns Before Stock Market Moves - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2013, written by Chester Curme, Adam Avakian, Dror Y. Kenett, H. Eugene Stanley and Tobias Preis.

Overview

Financial crises result from a catastrophic combination of actions. Vast stock market datasets offer us a window into some of the actions that have led to these crises. Here, authors investigate whether data generated through Internet usage contain traces of attempts to gather information before trading decisions were taken. Authors present evidence in line with the intriguing suggestion that data on changes in how often financially related Wikipedia pages were viewed may have contained early signs of stock market moves. Authors results suggest that online data may allow us to gain new insight into early information gathering stages of decision making.