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Dive into the research topics where Ming-Xia Li is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ming-Xia Li.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Calling patterns in human communication dynamics

Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wen-Jie Xie; Ming-Xia Li; Boris Podobnik; Wei-Xing Zhou; H. Eugene Stanley

Modern technologies not only provide a variety of communication modes (e.g., texting, cell phone conversation, and online instant messaging), but also detailed electronic traces of these communications between individuals. These electronic traces indicate that the interactions occur in temporal bursts. Here, we study intercall duration of communications of the 100,000 most active cell phone users of a Chinese mobile phone operator. We confirm that the intercall durations follow a power-law distribution with an exponential cutoff at the population level but find differences when focusing on individual users. We apply statistical tests at the individual level and find that the intercall durations follow a power-law distribution for only 3,460 individuals (3.46%). The intercall durations for the majority (73.34%) follow a Weibull distribution. We quantify individual users using three measures: out-degree, percentage of outgoing calls, and communication diversity. We find that the cell phone users with a power-law duration distribution fall into three anomalous clusters: robot-based callers, telecom fraud, and telephone sales. This information is of interest to both academics and practitioners, mobile telecom operators in particular. In contrast, the individual users with a Weibull duration distribution form the fourth cluster of ordinary cell phone users. We also discover more information about the calling patterns of these four clusters (e.g., the probability that a user will call the cr-th most contact and the probability distribution of burst sizes). Our findings may enable a more detailed analysis of the huge body of data contained in the logs of massive users.


Scientific Reports | 2015

A comparative analysis of the statistical properties of large mobile phone calling networks

Ming-Xia Li; Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wen-Jie Xie; Salvatore Miccichè; Michele Tumminello; Wei-Xing Zhou; Rosario N. Mantegna

Mobile phone calling is one of the most widely used communication methods in modern society. The records of calls among mobile phone users provide us a valuable proxy for the understanding of human communication patterns embedded in social networks. Mobile phone users call each other forming a directed calling network. If only reciprocal calls are considered, we obtain an undirected mutual calling network. The preferential communication behavior between two connected users can be statistically tested and it results in two Bonferroni networks with statistically validated edges. We perform a comparative analysis of the statistical properties of these four networks, which are constructed from the calling records of more than nine million individuals in Shanghai over a period of 110 days. We find that these networks share many common structural properties and also exhibit idiosyncratic features when compared with previously studied large mobile calling networks. The empirical findings provide us an intriguing picture of a representative large social network that might shed new lights on the modelling of large social networks.


Physica A-statistical Mechanics and Its Applications | 2015

Unveiling correlations between financial variables and topological metrics of trading networks: Evidence from a stock and its warrant

Ming-Xia Li; Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wen-Jie Xie; Xiong Xiong; Wei Zhang; Wei-Xing Zhou

Traders develop and adopt different trading strategies attempting to maximize their profits in financial markets. These trading strategies not only result in specific topological structures in trading networks, which connect the traders with the pairwise buy–sell relationships, but also have potential impacts on market dynamics. Here, we present a detailed analysis on how the market behaviors are correlated with the structures of traders in trading networks based on audit trail data for the Baosteel stock and its warrant at the transaction level from 22 August 2005 to 23 August 2006. In our investigation, we divide each trade day into 48 rolling time windows with a length of 5 min, construct a trading network within each window, and obtain a time series of over 11,600 trading networks. We find that there are strongly simultaneous correlations between the topological metrics (including network centralization, assortative index, and average path length) of trading networks that characterize the patterns of order execution and the financial variables (including return, volatility, intertrade duration, and trading volume) for the stock and its warrant. Our analysis may shed new lights on how the microscopic interactions between elements within complex system affect the system’s performance.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Skill complementarity enhances heterophily in collaboration networks

Wen-Jie Xie; Ming-Xia Li; Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Qun-Zhao Tan; Boris Podobnik; Wei-Xing Zhou; H. Eugene Stanley

Department of Finance, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China Research Center for Econophysics, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China Department of Mathematics, East China University of Scienc e and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China Shanda Games Ltd., 690 Bibo Road, Shanghai 201203, China Department of Physics and Center for Polymer Studies, Bosto n University, MA, USA Zagreb School of Economics and Management, 10000 Zagreb, Cr oatia Faculty of Civil Engineering, University of Rijeka, 51000 R ijeka, Croatia Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, 1000 Ljublj ana, SloveniaMuch empirical evidence shows that individuals usually exhibit significant homophily in social networks. We demonstrate, however, skill complementarity enhances heterophily in the formation of collaboration networks, where people prefer to forge social ties with people who have professions different from their own. We construct a model to quantify the heterophily by assuming that individuals choose collaborators to maximize utility. Using a huge database of online societies, we find evidence of heterophily in collaboration networks. The results of model calibration confirm the presence of heterophily. Both empirical analysis and model calibration show that the heterophilous feature is persistent along the evolution of online societies. Furthermore, the degree of skill complementarity is positively correlated with their production output. Our work sheds new light on the scientific research utility of virtual worlds for studying human behaviors in complex socioeconomic systems.


EPL | 2016

Quantifying immediate price impact of trades based on the

Wen-Jie Xie; Ming-Xia Li; Hai-Chuan Xu; Wei Chen; Wei-Xing Zhou; H. Eugene Stanley

Traders in a stock market exchange stock shares and form a stock trading network. Trades at different positions of the stock trading network may contain different information. We construct stock trading networks based on the limit order book data and classify traders into


Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment | 2015

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Ming-Xia Li; Wen-Jie Xie; Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wei-Xing Zhou

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EPJ Data Science | 2017

-shell decomposition of stock trading networks

Wen-Jie Xie; Yan-Hong Yang; Ming-Xia Li; Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wei-Xing Zhou

classes using the


EPL | 2015

Communication cliques in mobile phone calling networks

Li-Gong Xu; Ming-Xia Li; Wei-Xing Zhou

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Scientific Reports | 2015

Individual position diversity in dependence socioeconomic networks increases economic output

Wen-Jie Xie; Ming-Xia Li; Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wei-Xing Zhou

-shell decomposition method. We investigate the influences of trading behaviors on the price impact by comparing a closed national market (A-shares) with an international market (B-shares), individuals and institutions, partially filled and filled trades, buyer-initiated and seller-initiated trades, and trades at different positions of a trading network. Institutional traders professionally use some trading strategies to reduce the price impact and individuals at the same positions in the trading network have a higher price impact than institutions. We also find that trades in the core have higher price impacts than those in the peripheral shell.


Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment | 2016

Weiqi games as a tree: Zipf's law of openings and beyond

Zhi-Qiang Jiang; Wen-Jie Xie; Ming-Xia Li; Wei-Xing Zhou; Didier Sornette

People in modern societies form different social networks through numerous means of communication. These communication networks reflect different aspects of humans societal structure. The billing records of calls among mobile phone users enable us to construct a directed calling network (DCN) and its Bonferroni network (SVDCN) in which the preferential communications are statistically validated. Here we perform a comparative investigation of the cliques of the original DCN and its SVDCN constructed from the calling records of more than nine million individuals in Shanghai over a period of 110 days. We find that the statistical properties of the cliques of the two calling networks are qualitatively similar and the clique members in the DCN and the SVDCN exhibit idiosyncratic behaviors quantitatively. Members in large cliques are found to be spatially close to each other. Based on the clique degree profile of each mobile phone user, the most active users in the two calling networks can be classified in to several groups. The users in different groups are found to have different calling behaviors. Our study unveils interesting communication behaviors among mobile phone users that are densely connected to each other.

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Wei-Xing Zhou

East China University of Science and Technology

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Wen-Jie Xie

East China University of Science and Technology

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Zhi-Qiang Jiang

East China University of Science and Technology

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Li-Gong Xu

East China University of Science and Technology

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Ting Wu

East China University of Science and Technology

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Yan-Hong Yang

East China University of Science and Technology

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Yue Wang

East China University of Science and Technology

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Hai-Chuan Xu

East China University of Science and Technology

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