"ABSTRACT
Society’s
drive toward ever faster socio-technical systems, means that there is an urgent
need to understand the threat from ‘black swan’ extreme events that might
emerge4-19. On 6
May 2010, it took just five minutes for a spontaneous mix of human and machine
interactions in the global trading cyberspace to generate an unprecedented
system-wide Flash Crash4. However, little is known about what
lies ahead in the crucial sub-second regime where humans become unable to respond
or intervene sufficiently quickly20,21.
Here we analyze a set of 18,520 ultrafast black swan events that we have
uncovered in stock-price movements between 2006 and 2011. We provide empirical
evidence for, and an accompanying theory of, an abrupt system-wide transition
from a mixed human-machine phase to a new all-machine phase characterized by
frequent black swan events with ultrafast durations (<650ms for crashes,
<950ms for spikes). Our theory quantifies the systemic fluctuations in these
two distinct phases in terms of the diversity of the system’s internal ecology
and the amount of global information being processed. Our finding that the ten
most susceptible entities are major international banks, hints at a hidden
relationship between these ultrafast ‘fractures’ and the slow ‘breaking’ of the
global financial system post-2006. More generally, our work provides tools to
help predict and mitigate the systemic risk developing in any complex
socio-technical system that attempts to operate at, or beyond, the limits of
human response times..."
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