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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Franck Jovanovic (Professor, Professor, TELUQ, School of Administrative Sciences, University of Quebec in Montreal) , Christophe Schinckus (Lecturer in Finance, Lecturer in Finance, School of Management, University of Leicester)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9780190205034ISBN 10: 0190205032 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 26 January 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsChapter 1: Foundations of financial economics: the key role of the Gaussian distribution Chapter 2: Extreme values in financial economics: from their observation to their integration into the Gaussian framework Chapter 3. New tools for extreme-value analysis: statistical physics goes beyond its borders Chapter 4: The disciplinary position of Econophysics: new opportunities for financial innovations Chapter 5. Major contributions of Econophysics to Financial Economics Chapter 6: Towards a common framework Conclusion: What kind of future lies in store for econophysics?ReviewsTwenty years after the creation of econophysics, econophysicists and financial economists still tend to ignore each other. Unraveling the nature and the foundations of these two disciplines is essential in understanding where we are today, and Franck Jovanovic and Christophe Schinckus' book does this extremely well. It provides an outstanding analysis of the current state of knowledge that has emerged between econophysics and financial economics. The authors strive to transcend the boundary between the two disciplines and create a profitable dialogue, and they achieve this goal completely. I admire the authors and their work. All economists, financiers and physicists should read this book! -- <em>Eugene Stanley</em> Jovanovic and Schinckus have written a highly original book that looks at the intersection of physics and financial economics (econophysics) from a fresh perspective. Written by financial economists rather than physicists, it converts the results and concepts of econophysics into a language that can be grasped by economists and so put into practice. The fluid integration of history, conceptual foundations, formal details, as well as applications renders the book highly readable and of interest to researchers from a wide variety of disciplines. -- <em>Dean Rickles, Associate Professor, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney</em> Twenty years after the creation of econophysics, econophysicists and financial economists still tend to ignore each other. Unraveling the nature and the foundations of these two disciplines is essential in understanding where we are today, and Franck Jovanovic and Christophe Schinckus' book does this extremely well. It provides an outstanding analysis of the current state of knowledge that has emerged between econophysics and financial economics. The authors strive to transcend the boundary between the two disciplines and create a profitable dialogue, and they achieve this goal completely. I admire the authors and their work. All economists, financiers and physicists should read this book! -- Eugene Stanley Jovanovic and Schinckus have written a highly original book that looks at the intersection of physics and financial economics (econophysics) from a fresh perspective. Written by financial economists rather than physicists, it converts the results and concepts of econophysics into a language that can be grasped by economists and so put into practice. The fluid integration of history, conceptual foundations, formal details, as well as applications renders the book highly readable and of interest to researchers from a wide variety of disciplines. -- Dean Rickles, Associate Professor, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney -Twenty years after the creation of econophysics, econophysicists and financial economists still tend to ignore each other. Unraveling the nature and the foundations of these two disciplines is essential in understanding where we are today, and Franck Jovanovic and Christophe Schinckus' book does this extremely well. It provides an outstanding analysis of the current state of knowledge that has emerged between econophysics and financial economics. The authors strive to transcend the boundary between the two disciplines and create a profitable dialogue, and they achieve this goal completely. I admire the authors and their work. All economists, financiers and physicists should read this book!- -- Eugene Stanley -Jovanovic and Schinckus have written a highly original book that looks at the intersection of physics and financial economics (econophysics) from a fresh perspective. Written by financial economists rather than physicists, it converts the results and concepts of econophysics into a language that can be grasped by economists and so put into practice. The fluid integration of history, conceptual foundations, formal details, as well as applications renders the book highly readable and of interest to researchers from a wide variety of disciplines.- -- Dean Rickles, Associate Professor, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney Jovanovic and Schinckus have written a highly original book that looks at the intersection of physics and financial economics (econophysics) from a fresh perspective. Written by financial economists rather than physicists, it converts the results and concepts of econophysics into a language that can be grasped by economists and so put into practice. The fluid integration of history, conceptual foundations, formal details, as well as applications renders the book highly readable and of interest to researchers from a wide variety of disciplines. -- <em>Dean Rickles, Associate Professor, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney</em> Author InformationFranck Jovanovic is a Full Professor in Economics and Finance at the School of Business of the University of Québec's Distance Learning (TELUQ). He was previously an Associate Professor in Finance at University of Leicester School of Management. He published and edited 4 books and published almost 40 papers. His research interest mainly focuses on interdisciplinary issues in financial economics. Christophe Schinckus is Associate Professor in Finance at the University of Leicester, he published more than 50 papers in peer-reviewed journals. His research interest focuses on interdisciplinary issues in financial economics. He presented more than 40 communications in conference and was invited to give lectures in UK (Cambridge), Canada, Europe, Thailand and Vietnam. He is currently finishing a second PhD in Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |