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Dive into the research topics where Joel Tenenbaum is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel Tenenbaum.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Languages cool as they expand: Allometric scaling and the decreasing need for new words

Alexander Michael Petersen; Joel Tenenbaum; Shlomo Havlin; H. Eugene Stanley; Matjaž Perc

We analyze the occurrence frequencies of over 15 million words recorded in millions of books published during the past two centuries in seven different languages. For all languages and chronological subsets of the data we confirm that two scaling regimes characterize the word frequency distributions, with only the more common words obeying the classic Zipf law. Using corpora of unprecedented size, we test the allometric scaling relation between the corpus size and the vocabulary size of growing languages to demonstrate a decreasing marginal need for new words, a feature that is likely related to the underlying correlations between words. We calculate the annual growth fluctuations of word use which has a decreasing trend as the corpus size increases, indicating a slowdown in linguistic evolution following language expansion. This “cooling pattern” forms the basis of a third statistical regularity, which unlike the Zipf and the Heaps law, is dynamical in nature.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Statistical Laws Governing Fluctuations in Word Use from Word Birth to Word Death

Alexander Michael Petersen; Joel Tenenbaum; Shlomo Havlin; H. Eugene Stanley

We analyze the dynamic properties of 107 words recorded in English, Spanish and Hebrew over the period 1800–2008 in order to gain insight into the coevolution of language and culture. We report language independent patterns useful as benchmarks for theoretical models of language evolution. A significantly decreasing (increasing) trend in the birth (death) rate of words indicates a recent shift in the selection laws governing word use. For new words, we observe a peak in the growth-rate fluctuations around 40 years after introduction, consistent with the typical entry time into standard dictionaries and the human generational timescale. Pronounced changes in the dynamics of language during periods of war shows that word correlations, occurring across time and between words, are largely influenced by coevolutionary social, technological, and political factors. We quantify cultural memory by analyzing the long-term correlations in the use of individual words using detrended fluctuation analysis.


Physical Review E | 2013

Carbon-dioxide emissions trading and hierarchical structure in worldwide finance and commodities markets

Zeyu Zheng; Kazuko Yamasaki; Joel Tenenbaum; H. Eugene Stanley

In a highly interdependent economic world, the nature of relationships between financial entities is becoming an increasingly important area of study. Recently, many studies have shown the usefulness of minimal spanning trees (MST) in extracting interactions between financial entities. Here, we propose a modified MST network whose metric distance is defined in terms of cross-correlation coefficient absolute values, enabling the connections between anticorrelated entities to manifest properly. We investigate 69 daily time series, comprising three types of financial assets: 28 stock market indicators, 21 currency futures, and 20 commodity futures. We show that though the resulting MST network evolves over time, the financial assets of similar type tend to have connections which are stable over time. In addition, we find a characteristic time lag between the volatility time series of the stock market indicators and those of the EU CO(2) emission allowance (EUA) and crude oil futures (WTI). This time lag is given by the peak of the cross-correlation function of the volatility time series EUA (or WTI) with that of the stock market indicators, and is markedly different (>20 days) from 0, showing that the volatility of stock market indicators today can predict the volatility of EU emissions allowances and of crude oil in the near future.


Physical Review E | 2012

Earthquake networks based on similar activity patterns

Joel Tenenbaum; Shlomo Havlin; H. Eugene Stanley

Earthquakes are a complex spatiotemporal phenomenon, the underlying mechanism for which is still not fully understood despite decades of research and analysis. We propose and develop a network approach to earthquake events. In this network, a node represents a spatial location while a link between two nodes represents similar activity patterns in the two different locations. The strength of a link is proportional to the strength of the cross correlation in activities of two nodes joined by the link. We apply our network approach to a Japanese earthquake catalog spanning the 14-year period 1985-1998. We find strong links representing large correlations between patterns in locations separated by more than 1000 kilometers, corroborating prior observations that earthquake interactions have no characteristic length scale. We find network characteristics not attributable to chance alone, including a large number of network links, high node assortativity, and strong stability over time.


Physical Review E | 2010

Comparison between response dynamics in transition economies and developed economies

Joel Tenenbaum; Davor Horvatić; Slavica Cosovic Bajic; Beco Pehlivanovic; Boris Podobnik; H. Eugene Stanley


Physical Review E | 2012

Scaling of Seismic Memory with Earthquake Size

Zeyu Zheng; Kazuko Yamasaki; Joel Tenenbaum; Boris Podobnik; Yoshiyasu Tamura; H. Eugene Stanley


Physical Review E | 2009

Asymmetry in power-law magnitude correlations

Boris Podobnik; Davor Horvatić; Joel Tenenbaum; H. Eugene Stanley


arXiv: Statistical Finance | 2014

Predicting market instability: New dynamics between volume and volatility

Zeyu Zheng; Zhi Qiao; Joel Tenenbaum; H. Eugene Stanley; Baowen Li


Archive | 2012

Interdisciplinary applications of statistical physics to complex systems: seismic physics, econophysics, and sociophysics

H. Eugene Stanley; Joel Tenenbaum


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

The Growth Dynamics of Words: How Historical Context Shapes the Competitive Linguistic Environment

Joel Tenenbaum; Alexander Michael Petersen; Shlomo Havlin; H. Eugene Stanley

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Zeyu Zheng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Kazuko Yamasaki

Tokyo University of Information Sciences

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Baowen Li

University of Colorado Boulder

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