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NUI Galway Workshop on Computable Economics Computability, Computational Complexity and Dynamical Systems Theory in Economics and Finance A one-week workshop on Computable Economics, in a ‘tutorial’ mode, will be held in the department of economics at NUI Galway, 20-24, March 2005. The aim of the Tutorial Workshop will be to provide doctoral students, Junior Faculty and interested Post-Doctoral scholars at Irish Universities, and other resident members of Research Institutes in Ireland, a basic grounding in the mathematical and experimental methods of Computable Economics. Senior scholars in the relevant disciplines, all of whom are pioneers in the fields in which they are scheduled to lecture, will be available, throughout the week of the Tutorial Workshop, for consultation, advice and help on all matters regarding the contents of the lectures. The invited lecturers are: Professor Francisco Antonio Doria Institute for Advanced Studies University of São Paulo São Paulo and School of Communications Federal University of Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro Brazil Professor Duncan Foley Graduate Faculty New School University New York, USA Professor Joe McCauley Department of Physics University of Houston Houston, Texas, USA Dr. Sheri M. Markose Economics Department Director: Centre For Computational Finance and Economic Agents (CCFEA) University of Essex Wivenhoe Park Colchester C04 3SQ United Kingdom Professor Jorma Rissanen Finnish Academy of Sciences Helsinki, Finland and IBM, San Jose California, USA Internal, NUI Galway, Lecturers and Research Assistants: Professor Tom Boylan, Department of Economics, NUI Galway Professor Vela Velupillai, Department of Economics, NUI Galway & CISC/DERI Dr Srinivasan Raghavendra, CISC/DERI Mr Stephen Kinsella, Department of Economics, NUI Galway & CISC/DERI Brief Profiles of the Invited Lecturers: Professor Francisco Doria, together with his colleague in São Paulo, Professor Newton da Costa, was one of the first, almost a decade and a half ago, to study and construct undecidable dynamical systems within the mathematics of classical dynamics. They were also pioneers, together with their doctoral student Marcelo Tsuji, in studying undecidability and uncomputability issues in classical Game Theory. Two of the contributions by Doria and da Costa (one with Tsuji), on these themes, have become classics: Undecidability and Incompleteness in Classical Mechanics, (jointly with N.C.A da Costa), International Journal of Theoretical Physics. Vol.30, #8, 1991; The Incompleteness Theories of Games, (jointly with N.C.A da Costa and Marcelo Tsuji), Journal of Philosophical Logic, Vol. 27, 1998. 2 Professor Duncan Foley is an acknowledged scholar of economic theory and an outstanding pedagogical exponent of dynamical systems theory in macroeconomics and economic dynamics. His recent Schumpeter Lectures, delivered at the University of Graz, and published as, Unholy Trinity: Labor, Capital and Land in the New Economy (Routledge, London, 2003), provides a fresh and characteristically original reinterpretation of the methods of classical political economy, using the vision and tools of the new sciences of complexity, to analyse and understand the self-organising character of advanced industrial economies regarded as complex, adaptive, non-equilibrium systems. Two of his recent papers, of direct relevance to the themes of the Workshop, are: The Co-evolution of Cooperation and Complexity in a MultiPlayer, Local-Interaction Prisoners’ Dilemma, (jointly with Peter S. Albin), Complexity, Vol. 6, #3, 2001 Statistical Equilibrium in Economics: Method, Interpretation and an Example in, General Equilibrium: Problems and Prospects edited by Fabio Petri and Frank Hahn, Routledge, London, 2003 Professor Joe McCauley is one of the leading scholars of nonlinear dynamical systems theory from an algorithmic point of view and has emerged, in recent years, with penetrating studies of the dynamics and volatility of financial markets. His two classic studies in these fields are: Chaos, Dynamics and Fractals: An Algorithmic Approach to Deterministic Chaos, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993. Dynamics of Markets: Econophysics and Finance, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2004. Dr Sheri Markose early recognised the significance of recursion theory and model theory and was a pioneer in reformulating, in particular, the macroeconomic problems of policy ineffectiveness and lack of structural invariance, using the tools of modern mathematical logic. Her creative energies have also been channelled, more recently, into Institution building with the setting up of Centre For Computational Finance and Economic Agents (CCFEA) at the University of Essex under her Directorship. Two of her recent contributions are: 3 “The New Evolutionary Computational Paradigm Of Complex Adaptive Systems: Challenges And Prospects For Economics And Finance.” In: Genetic Algorithms and Genetic Programming in Computational Finance, Edited by ShuHeng Chen, Kluwer Academic Publishers, (pp.443-484 ), 2002. “The Red Queen Principle and the Emergence of Efficient Financial Markets: An Agent Based Approach” (jointly with Edward Tsang and Serafin Martinez). Forthcoming in: Proceedings of WEHIA-8 (Workshop of Heterogeneous Interacting Agents), edited by Thomas Luz, SpringerVerlag, Heidelberg & New York, 2004. Dr Jorma Rissanen is the acknowledged pioneer of Stochastic Complexity, the field that made algorithmic complexity theory computably feasible and was able to embed classical learning theory within a formal, numerically feasible, theory of induction. His book Stochastic Complexity in Statistical Inquiry (World Scientific, 1989) made the Minimum Description Length principle widely practicable and gave estimation theory a sound computable foundation, almost for the first time since Gauss! Two classic papers by Dr Rissanen, on Stochastic Complexity, are: “A Universal Prior for Integers and Estimation by Minimum Description Length”, Annals of Statistics, Vol. 11, #2, 1983. “Stochastic Complexity”, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B, Vol. 49, #3, 1987. A Synopsis of the aims and scope of the Tutorial Workshop The basic aim of the week-long tutorial workshop is to make young researchers in Ireland familiar with the field of computable economics. With this aim in mind the series of lectures will concentrate on providing pedagogical introductions to the mathematical methods of computable economics with copious applications and numerical examples in computational finance, game theory, business cycle theory, learning in macroeconomic models and evolutionary growth theory. It is hoped that the participants of the workshop will, at the end of the week of lectures and tutorials, will be able to formulate their own research topics with a serious computable content and even within the framework of computable economics. 4 Two Research Assistants, Dr S. Raghavendra and Mr S. Kinsella, would be providing help with the use of Matlab and Mathematica to formalize, study and simulate some of the models used and described in the lectures. In particular, models of computational finance, evolutionary growth and computable learning will be so formulated as to be amenable to numerical studies quite immediately. Access to online financial data for simulation and experimental purposes will be arranged for the duration of the Workshop. The preliminary program for the Tutorial Workshop is as follows: Monday, 20 March, 2005 9.00 - 9.15 Professor Tom Boylan, Department of Economics, NUI Galway Introduction and Welcome to the Workshop 9.15 – 9.30 Professor Vela Velupillai, Department of Economics, NUI Galway A Brief Summary of the Aims of the Workshop 9.30 – 10.30 Professor Tom Boylan, Department of Economics, NUI Galway Methods, Analogies, Modelling and Predictions in Economics 10.30 -11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 13.00 Professor Vela Velupillai Introduction to Computable Economics 13.00 – 14.30 Lunch Break 14.30 – 16.30 Professor Duncan Foley Introduction to the Complexity Vision in Economics Tuesday, 21 March, 2005 5 9.30 – 10.30 Professor Vela Velupillai, Department of Economics, NUI Galway Computable and Constructive Analysis in Economic Theory 10.30 -11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 13.00 Professor Joe McCauley Introduction to Computational Finance 13.00 – 14.30 Lunch Break 14.30 – 16.30 Professor Francisco Antonio Doria Introduction to Computational Complexity Theory Wednesday, 22 March, 2005 9.30 – 10.30 Dr Sheri Markose On Hostile Agents, Red Queen Dynamics and Evolutionary Complexity in Economics and Finance 10.30 -11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 13.00 Professor Joe McCauley Dynamics of Financial Markets, Volatility and Option Pricing 13.00 – 14.30 Lunch Break 14.30 – 16.30 Dr Jorma Rissanen Introduction to Stochastic Complexity Theory 6 Thursday, 23 March, 2005 9.30 – 10.30 Professor Vela Velupillai, Department of Economics, NUI Galway An Overview of Behavioural Economics with Special Reference to Rationality and Learning 10.30 -11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 13.00 Professor Francisco Antonio Doria Computing the Future: Introduction to Undecidability and Incompletenes 13.00 – 14.30 Lunch Break 14.30 – 16.30 Dr Jorma Rissanen Learning, Estimation and Prediction Friday, 24 March, 2005 9.30 – 10.30 Professor Vela Velupillai, Department of Economics, NUI Galway ‘Beware the Ides of March’: Uncomputability and Undecidability in Economic Theory 10.30 -11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 13.00 Professor Duncan Foley Complexity, Self-Organisation and Political Economy 13.00 – 14.30 Lunch Break 14.30 – 16.30 Professor Tom Boylan 7 Reflections and Speculations Recommended Texts for the Workshop 1. Dynamics of Markets by Joeseph L McCauley, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2004-07-06 2. Computability, Complexity and Constructivity in Economic Analysis, edited by K. Vela Velupillai, [To be published by Blackwell Publishers, Oxford, March 2005] 3. Computable Economics by K Vela Velupillai, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000. It is expected that the second of the above two books will be made available to the participants about a week prior to the beginning of the Workshop (free of charge). An updated and more pedagogically oriented version of item 3, with the title, Introduction to Algorithmic Economics is being prepared by Vela Velupillai. If it is ready, even in manuscript form, before March, 2005, it will also be made available to the participants. 8