Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems

What happens when you slow down the delivery of information in large-scale complex systems that operate faster than the blink of an eye? This question just adopted immediate commercial, legal and political importance following U.S. regulators’ decision to allow an intentional 350 microsecond delay t...

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Main Authors: Pedro D. Manrique, Minzhang Zheng, D. Dylan Johnson Restrepo, Pak Ming Hui, Neil F. Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-01-01
Series:Results in Physics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379717309142
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spelling doaj-fa4831b6ed864d55ae544b0582f4294e2020-11-25T02:15:04ZengElsevierResults in Physics2211-37972017-01-01730243030Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systemsPedro D. Manrique0Minzhang Zheng1D. Dylan Johnson Restrepo2Pak Ming Hui3Neil F. Johnson4Physics Department, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33126, USA; Corresponding author.Physics Department, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33126, USAPhysics Department, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33126, USADepartment of Physics, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong, ChinaPhysics Department, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33126, USAWhat happens when you slow down the delivery of information in large-scale complex systems that operate faster than the blink of an eye? This question just adopted immediate commercial, legal and political importance following U.S. regulators’ decision to allow an intentional 350 microsecond delay to be added in the ultrafast network of financial exchanges. However there is still no scientific understanding available to policymakers of the potential system-wide impact of such delays. Here we take a first step in addressing this question using a minimal model of a population of competing, heterogeneous, adaptive agents which has previously been shown to produce similar statistical features to real markets. We find that while certain extreme system-level behaviors can be prevented by such delays, the duration of others is increased. This leads to a highly non-trivial relationship between delays and system-wide instabilities which warrants deeper empirical investigation. The generic nature of our model suggests there should be a fairly wide class of complex systems where such delay-driven extreme behaviors can arise, e.g. sub-second delays in brain function possibly impacting individuals’ behavior, and sub-second delays in navigational systems potentially impacting the safety of driverless vehicles. Keywords: Ultra-fast networks, Temporal perturbation, Competition, Modelinghttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379717309142
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pedro D. Manrique
Minzhang Zheng
D. Dylan Johnson Restrepo
Pak Ming Hui
Neil F. Johnson
spellingShingle Pedro D. Manrique
Minzhang Zheng
D. Dylan Johnson Restrepo
Pak Ming Hui
Neil F. Johnson
Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
Results in Physics
author_facet Pedro D. Manrique
Minzhang Zheng
D. Dylan Johnson Restrepo
Pak Ming Hui
Neil F. Johnson
author_sort Pedro D. Manrique
title Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
title_short Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
title_full Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
title_fullStr Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
title_full_unstemmed Impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
title_sort impact of delayed information in sub-second complex systems
publisher Elsevier
series Results in Physics
issn 2211-3797
publishDate 2017-01-01
description What happens when you slow down the delivery of information in large-scale complex systems that operate faster than the blink of an eye? This question just adopted immediate commercial, legal and political importance following U.S. regulators’ decision to allow an intentional 350 microsecond delay to be added in the ultrafast network of financial exchanges. However there is still no scientific understanding available to policymakers of the potential system-wide impact of such delays. Here we take a first step in addressing this question using a minimal model of a population of competing, heterogeneous, adaptive agents which has previously been shown to produce similar statistical features to real markets. We find that while certain extreme system-level behaviors can be prevented by such delays, the duration of others is increased. This leads to a highly non-trivial relationship between delays and system-wide instabilities which warrants deeper empirical investigation. The generic nature of our model suggests there should be a fairly wide class of complex systems where such delay-driven extreme behaviors can arise, e.g. sub-second delays in brain function possibly impacting individuals’ behavior, and sub-second delays in navigational systems potentially impacting the safety of driverless vehicles. Keywords: Ultra-fast networks, Temporal perturbation, Competition, Modeling
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379717309142
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AT ddylanjohnsonrestrepo impactofdelayedinformationinsubsecondcomplexsystems
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AT neilfjohnson impactofdelayedinformationinsubsecondcomplexsystems
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