How Noise Becomes Information
The brain is wired to find patterns. But in markets, this wiring creates false signals. This book explains how randomness becomes structure in your mind.
You see the same chart as everyone else. The same candles. The same price. But you see a pattern - and you're sure it means something.
It might not.
The brain is wired to find patterns. It's how we survive. But in markets, this wiring creates false signals. Randomness becomes structure. Noise becomes information. And we trade on it.
This book explains how that happens - and what it means for your decisions.
What's Inside
- What noise actually is in markets
- Why your brain finds patterns even in randomness
- The difference between signal and noise (and why it's hard to tell)
- How confirmation bias locks in false patterns
- When less information actually produces better decisions
Chapters
- 1 What Noise Actually Is
- 2 Why the Brain Seeks Patterns
- 3 The Difference Between Signal and Noise
- 4 How Noise Becomes Information
- 5 Confirmation Bias and Pattern Recognition
- 6 Information Overload
- 7 When Less Information Is Better
- 8 The Noise Traders Mistake for Signal
- 9 Living with Uncertainty
- 10 What Remains