| Literature DB >> 35877608 |
Manish Singh1,2,3, Qingyang Xu1,4, Sarah J Wang1, Tinah Hong1, Mohammad M Ghassemi5,6, Andrew W Lo1,4,2,7,3.
Abstract
We study the relationships between the real-time psychophysiological activity of professional traders, their financial transactions, and market fluctuations. We collected multiple physiological signals such as heart rate, blood volume pulse, and electrodermal activity of 55 traders at a leading global financial institution during their normal working hours over a five-day period. Using their physiological measurements, we implemented a novel metric of trader's "psychophysiological activation" to capture affect such as excitement, stress and irritation. We find statistically significant relations between traders' psychophysiological activation levels and such as their financial transactions, market fluctuations, the type of financial products they traded, and their trading experience. We conducted post-measurement interviews with traders who participated in this study to obtain additional insights in the key factors driving their psychophysiological activation during financial risk processing. Our work illustrates that psychophysiological activation plays a prominent role in financial risk processing for professional traders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35877608 PMCID: PMC9312384 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1Histograms of four PP activation metrics.
The y-axis represents the number of trader-days and the x-axis represents the activation metric values. We observe considerable variations in PP activation levels across traders. Average activation is a dimensionless quantity. Mild and extreme activation proportions are measured in percentages (%). Activation length is measured in seconds (s).
Summary statistics of four PP activation metrics.
Average activation is a dimensionless quantity. Mild and extreme activation proportions are measured in percentages (%). Activation length is measured in seconds (s).
| Metric | Min. | Max. | Mean | Std. Dev. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average Activation | 2.76 | 5.34 | 3.79 | 0.37 |
| Mild Activation Proportion (%) | 7.42 | 17.57 | 11.54 | 1.99 |
| Extreme Activation Proportion (%) | 0.45 | 6.78 | 2.71 | 1.12 |
| Activation Length (s) | 26 | 1031 | 152 | 94 |
The number of statistically significant Granger causality relations between each market index and traders’ PP activation, with Holm-Bonferroni correction at 5% significance level.
| Market Index | Number of significant GC relations |
|---|---|
| Credit-Default Swap Index IG | 22 |
| Credit-Default Swap Index HY | 19 |
| USD Index | 3 |
| 10Y US Treasury Future Price | 3 |
| S&P 500 E-mini Future Price | 4 |
| 5Y US Treasury Future Price | 6 |
| Crude Oil Futures Price | 4 |
| VIX Futures Price | 7 |
Fig 2Evolution of trader’s PP activation around a transaction.
The shaded region corresponds to the 95% confidence band. The x-axis is the time difference (in minutes) between the transaction time, defined as time 0, and measurement time. The y-axis is the average PP activation value. We observe that traders have the highest PP activation during 15 to 25 minutes after the transaction, as well as a local peak 5 minutes before the transaction.