TESTING FOR NONLINEARITY IN SHANGHAI STOCK MARKET

2004 ◽  
Vol 18 (17n19) ◽  
pp. 2720-2724 ◽  
Author(s):  
HAIYAN WANG ◽  
LONGKUN TANG

In this paper, we apply IAAFT to generate surrogate time series of measured multivariate time series. A quantitative method to detect nonlinearity in multivariate time series is proposed using the generalized redundancy and linear redundancy as the significance test statistic. The null hypothesis of a multivariate linear Gaussian random process is tested using the multivariate surrogate data. The validity of this method is demonstrated using two types models (linear and nonlinear) and applied to Shanghai stock market.

1999 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. Pavlos ◽  
M. A. Athanasiu ◽  
D. Kugiumtzis ◽  
N. Hatzigeorgiu ◽  
A. G. Rigas ◽  
...  

Abstract. A long AE index time series is used as a crucial magnetospheric quantity in order to study the underlying dynainics. For this purpose we utilize methods of nonlinear and chaotic analysis of time series. Two basic components of this analysis are the reconstruction of the experimental tiine series state space trajectory of the underlying process and the statistical testing of an null hypothesis. The null hypothesis against which the experimental time series are tested is that the observed AE index signal is generated by a linear stochastic signal possibly perturbed by a static nonlinear distortion. As dis ' ' ating statistics we use geometrical characteristics of the reconstructed state space (Part I, which is the work of this paper) and dynamical characteristics (Part II, which is the work a separate paper), and "nonlinear" surrogate data, generated by two different techniques which can mimic the original (AE index) signal. lie null hypothesis is tested for geometrical characteristics which are the dimension of the reconstructed trajectory and some new geometrical parameters introduced in this work for the efficient discrimination between the nonlinear stochastic surrogate data and the AE index. Finally, the estimated geometric characteristics of the magnetospheric AE index present new evidence about the nonlinear and low dimensional character of the underlying magnetospheric dynamics for the AE index.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail Kanevski

<p>Nowadays a wide range of methods and tools to study and forecast time series is available. An important problem in forecasting concerns embedding of time series, i.e. construction of a high dimensional space where forecasting problem is considered as a regression task. There are several basic linear and nonlinear approaches of constructing such space by defining an optimal delay vector using different theoretical concepts. Another way is to consider this space as an input feature space – IFS, and to apply machine learning feature selection (FS) algorithms to optimize IFS according to the problem under study (analysis, modelling or forecasting). Such approach is an empirical one: it is based on data and depends on the FS algorithms applied. In machine learning features are generally classified as relevant, redundant and irrelevant. It gives a reach possibility to perform advanced multivariate time series exploration and development of interpretable predictive models.</p><p>Therefore, in the present research different FS algorithms are used to analyze fundamental properties of time series from empirical point of view. Linear and nonlinear simulated time series are studied in detail to understand the advantages and drawbacks of the proposed approach. Real data case studies deal with air pollution and wind speed times series. Preliminary results are quite promising and more research is in progress.</p>


Complexity ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Shanglei Chai ◽  
Zhen Zhang ◽  
Mo Du ◽  
Lei Jiang

Financial internationalization leads to similar fluctuations and spillover effects in financial markets around the world, resulting in cross-border financial risks. This study examines comovements across G20 international stock markets while considering the volatility similarity and spillover effects. We provide a new approach using an ICA- (independent component analysis-) based ARMA-APARCH-M model to shed light on whether there are spillover effects among G20 stock markets with similar dynamics. Specifically, we first identify which G20 stock markets have similar volatility features using a fuzzy C-means time series clustering method and then investigate the dominant source of volatility spillovers using the ICA-based ARMA-APARCH-M model. The evidence has shown that the ICA method can more accurately capture market comovements with nonnormal distributions of the financial time series data by transforming the multivariate time series into statistically independent components (ICs). Our findings indicate that the G20 stock markets are clustered into three categories according to volatility similarity. There are spillover effects in stock market comovements of each group and the dominant source can be identified. This study has important implications for investors in international financial markets and for policymakers in G20 countries.


2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (01) ◽  
pp. 1550013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Araújo Rios ◽  
Michael Small ◽  
Rodrigo Fernandes de Mello

Surrogate data methods have been widely applied to produce synthetic data, while maintaining the same statistical properties as the original. By using such methods, one can analyze certain properties of time series. In this context, Theiler's surrogate data methods are the most commonly considered approaches. These are based on the Fourier transform, limiting them to be applied only on stationary time series. Consequently, time series including nonstationary behavior, such as trend, produces spurious high frequencies with Theiler's methods, resulting in inconsistent surrogates. To solve this problem, we present two new methods that combine time series decomposition techniques and surrogate data methods. These new methods initially decompose time series into a set of monocomponents and the trend. Afterwards, traditional surrogate methods are applied on those individual monocomponents and a set of surrogates is obtained. Finally, all individual surrogates plus the trend signal are combined in order to create a single surrogate series. Using this method, one can investigate linear and nonlinear Gaussian processes in time series, irrespective of the presence of nonstationary behavior.


2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (07) ◽  
pp. 1881-1896 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. KUGIUMTZIS

In the analysis of real world data, the surrogate data test is often performed in order to investigate nonlinearity in the data. The null hypothesis of the test is that the original time series is generated from a linear stochastic process possibly undergoing a nonlinear static transform. We argue against reported rejection of the null hypothesis and claims of evidence of nonlinearity based on a single nonlinear statistic. In particular, two schemes for the generation of surrogate data are examined, the amplitude adjusted Fourier transform (AAFT) and the iterated AAFT (IAFFT) and many nonlinear discriminating statistics are used for testing, i.e. the fit with the Volterra series of polynomials and the fit with local average mappings, the mutual information, the correlation dimension, the false nearest neighbors, the largest Lyapunov exponent and simple nonlinear averages (the three point autocorrelation and the time reversal asymmetry). The results on simulated data and real data (EEG and exchange rates) suggest that the test depends on the method and its parameters, the algorithm generating the surrogate data and the observational data of the examined process.


2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (04) ◽  
pp. 983-997 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. E. RAPP ◽  
C. J. CELLUCCI ◽  
T. A. A. WATANABE ◽  
A. M. ALBANO ◽  
T. I. SCHMAH

It is shown that inappropriately constructed random phase surrogates can give false-positive rejections of the surrogate null hypothesis. Specifically, the procedure erroneously indicated the presence of deterministic, nonlinear structure in a time series that was constructed by linearly filtering normally distributed random numbers. It is shown that the erroneous identification was due to numerical errors in the estimation of the signal's Fourier transform. In the example examined here, the introduction of data windowing into the algorithm eliminated the false-positive rejection of the null hypothesis. Additional guidelines for the use of surrogates are considered, and the results of a comparison test of random phase surrogates, Gaussian scaled surrogates and iterative surrogates are presented.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jolan Heyse ◽  
Laurent Sheybani ◽  
Serge Vulliémoz ◽  
Pieter van Mierlo

The detection of causal effects among simultaneous observations provides knowledge about the underlying network, and is a topic of interests in many scientific areas. Over the years different causality measures have been developed, each with their own advantages and disadvantages. However, an extensive evaluation study is missing. In this work we consider some of the best-known causality measures i.e., cross-correlation, (conditional) Granger causality index (CGCI), partial directed coherence (PDC), directed transfer function (DTF), and partial mutual information on mixed embedding (PMIME). To correct for noise-related spurious connections, each measure (except PMIME) is tested for statistical significance based on surrogate data. The performance of the causality metrics is evaluated on a set of simulation models with distinct characteristics, to assess how well they work in- as well as outside of their “comfort zone.” PDC and DTF perform best on systems with frequency-specific connections, while PMIME is the only one able to detect non-linear interactions. The varying performance depending on the system characteristics warrants the use of multiple measures and comparing their results to avoid errors. Furthermore, lags between coupled variables are inherent to real-world systems and could hold essential information on the network dynamics. They are however often not taken into account and we lack proper tools to estimate them. We propose three new methods for lag estimation in multivariate time series, based on autoregressive modelling and information theory. One of the autoregressive methods and the one based on information theory were able to reliably identify the correct lag value in different simulated systems. However, only the latter was able to maintain its performance in the case of non-linear interactions. As a clinical application, the same methods are also applied on an intracranial recording of an epileptic seizure. The combined knowledge from the causality measures and insights from the simulations, on how these measures perform under different circumstances and when to use which one, allow us to recreate a plausible network of the seizure propagation that supports previous observations of desynchronisation and synchronisation during seizure progression. The lag estimation results show absence of a relationship between connectivity strength and estimated lag values, which contradicts the line of thinking in connectivity shaped by the neuron doctrine.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 40-58
Author(s):  
Chandra Prayaga ◽  
Krishna Devulapalli ◽  
Lakshmi Prayaga ◽  
Aaron Wade

This paper studies the impact of sentiments expressed by tweets from Twitter on the stock market associated with COVID-19 during the critical period from December 1, 2019 to May 31, 2020. The stock prices of 30 companies on the Dow Jones Index were collected for this period. Twitter tweets were also collected, using the search phrases “COVID-19” and “Corona Virus” for the same period, and their sentiment scores were calculated. The three time series, open and close stock values, and the corresponding sentiment scores from tweets were sorted by date and combined. Multivariate time series models based on vector error correction (VEC) models were applied to this data. Forecasts for these 30 companies were made for the time series open, for the 30 days of June 2020, following the data collection period. Stock market data for the month of June was for all the companies was compared with the forecast from the model. These were found to be in excellent agreement, implying that sentiment had a significant impact or was significantly impacted by the stock market prices.


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