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Information-theoretic measures for non-linear causality detection: application to social media sentiment and cryptocurrency prices

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  • Z. Keskin
  • T. Aste

Abstract

Information transfer between time series is calculated by using the asymmetric information-theoretic measure known as transfer entropy. Geweke's autoregressive formulation of Granger causality is used to find linear transfer entropy, and Schreiber's general, non-parametric, information-theoretic formulation is used to detect non-linear transfer entropy. We first validate these measures against synthetic data. Then we apply these measures to detect causality between social sentiment and cryptocurrency prices. We perform significance tests by comparing the information transfer against a null hypothesis, determined via shuffled time series, and calculate the Z-score. We also investigate different approaches for partitioning in nonparametric density estimation which can improve the significance of results. Using these techniques on sentiment and price data over a 48-month period to August 2018, for four major cryptocurrencies, namely bitcoin (BTC), ripple (XRP), litecoin (LTC) and ethereum (ETH), we detect significant information transfer, on hourly timescales, in directions of both sentiment to price and of price to sentiment. We report the scale of non-linear causality to be an order of magnitude greater than linear causality.

Suggested Citation

  • Z. Keskin & T. Aste, 2019. "Information-theoretic measures for non-linear causality detection: application to social media sentiment and cryptocurrency prices," Papers 1906.05740, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2019.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1906.05740
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    Cited by:

    1. Scaramozzino, Roberta & Cerchiello, Paola & Aste, Tomaso, 2021. "Information theoretic causality detection between financial and sentiment data," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 110903, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
    2. Roberta Scaramozzino & Paola Cerchiello & Tomaso Aste, 2021. "Information theoretic causality detection between financial and sentiment data," DEM Working Papers Series 202, University of Pavia, Department of Economics and Management.

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