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Shall I throw the cube for you?
Memory is definitely there, but that does not at all imply the repetitiveness of situations... it's a self-deception... Imho...
It's like thinking in your second marriage that you live with your first wife...... naive...
Memory is definitely there, but that does not at all imply repeatability of situations... it's a self-deception... Imho...
It's like thinking in your second marriage that you live with your first wife...... naive...
Greetings Ivan.
Respect the author's work. He wrote a theorem. And maybe the theorem is right. And you, I'm sorry, are giving some dead examples))))
It's a type of martingale.
What do numbers have to do with it? What if events are labelled as: red, loud, salty, smelly, soft, heavy?
Simply put, to prove the existence of memory in a random sequence, you need to analyse it to its full depth.
... but stock market speculation is allowed. However, if stock quotes are represented as an equal probability Bernoulli scheme with some missing data (holes in history), the theorem again proves that the expectation at the same conditional probabilities will be positive.The highlighted phrase is a false premise.
Exchange quotes are not a random sequence. They cannot be"represented as an equal probability Bernoulli scheme".
The existence of memory in stock quotes is obvious. However, by no means as a memory of a random sequence.
The existence of a memory in stock quotes is obvious. However, by no means like a random sequence memory.
Come on - past values do, at least intraday values do, as an example - after a level breakout, then a pullback and in more than half of the cases the price will return to the broken level after the pullback. Another question is when the price returns and how strong the pullback will be - it is a matter of chance.
RW: on daily timeframes the system of price reversal to the previous value also works: 2-4 days the price goes in one direction, then it reverses to the initial value, how long will the price behave like that? - Probably, it is a random value relative to long term trends.
The human mind is designed to look for patterns (in everything), and it does so well.
But don't look for patterns where there are none. It does not take it into account, and it makes mistakes. All from lack of knowledge about the subject. Why do you think forecasting of financial quotes etc. is of no scientific interest (i.e. this area is of no interest to science and it has a clear answer to what it thinks about it).