Notes

Chapter 3

1. G. Soros. Soros on Soros: Staying Ahead of the Curve. New York: John Wiley, 1995.

2. M. Gladwell. Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking. Boston: Little Brown/Back Bay Books, 2005.

3. M. LeGault. Think: Why Crucial Decisions Can’t Be Made in the Blink of an Eye. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2006.

Chapter 4

1. P. McHugh and P. Slavney. The Perspectives of Psychiatry, second edition, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.

Chapter 6

1. T. Canli, et al. “Amygdala Response to Happy Faces as a Function of Extraversion.” Science June 21, 2002: 2191.

Chapter 14

1. A. Lo, D. Repin, and B. Steenbarger. “Fear and Greed in Financial Markets: A Clinical Study of Day-Traders.” Cognitive Neurosciences Foundations of Economic Behaviors (2005) 72/2: 287–312.

2. R. Peterson et al. “The Personality Traits of Successful Investors During the U.S. Stock Market’s ‘Lost Decade’ of 2000–2010.” Market Psych LLC report, n.d. Unpublished white paper.

Chapter 15

1. B. Knutson et al. “Selective Alteration of Personality and Social Behavior by Serotonergic Intervention, American Journal of Psychiatry 155/3: 373–379.

2. A. Jorm. “Modifiability of Trait Anxiety and Neuroticism: A Meta-Analysis of the Literature, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry (1989) 23: 21–29.

3. T. Tang et al. “Personality Change During Depression Treatment,” Archives of General Psychiatry (2009) 66/12: 1322–1330.

4. K. Glinski and A. Page. “Modifiability of Neuroticism, Extraversion, and Agreeableness by Group Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder,” Behavior Change (2010) 27/1: 42–52.

Chapter 16

1. C. Mayfield et al. “Investment Management and Personality Type,” Financial Review Services (2008) 17: 219–236.

2. N. Nicholson et al. “Personality and Domain-Specific Risk Taking,” Journal of Risk Research (2005) 8/2: 157–176.

3. D. Knoch et al. “Disruption of Right Prefrontal Cortex by Low-Frequency Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Induces Risk-Taking Behavior,” Journal of Neuroscience (2006) 26/24: 6469–6472.

4. D. Smith and R. Whitelaw. “Time-Varying Risk Aversion and the Risk Return Relation” (June 19, 2009), 23rd Australasian Finance and Banking Conference, 2010 paper.

Chapter 17

1. A. Lo, D. Repin, and B. Steenbarger. “Fear and Greed in Financial Markets: A Clinical Study of Day-Traders.” Cognitive Neurosciences Foundations of Economic Behavors (2005) 95/2: 352–359.

2. T. Odean. “Do Investors Trade Too Much?” American Economic Review (December 1999) 89: 1279–1298.

3. B. Biais et al. “Judgmental Overconfidence, Self-Monitoring, and Trading Performance in an Experimental Financial Market.” Review of Economic Studies (2005) 72/2: 287–312.

Chapter 20

1. P. Costa and R. McRea. “Influence of Extraversion and Neuroticism on Subjective Well-Being: Happy and Unhappy People. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (1980) 38/4: 668–678.

Chapter 22

1. L. Williams. Confessions of a Radical Tax Protestor. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley, 2011.

Chapter 24

1. K. Angle. One Hundred Million Dollars in Profits: An Anatomy of a Market Killing. Bay Shore, NY: Windsor Books, 1989.

Chapter 27

1. R. Vince. Risk Opportunity Analysis. Amazon’s CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2012.

2. E. Thorp. Beat the Dealer. New York: Random House/Vintage Books, 1962. Revised edition, 1966.

3. R. Vince. Portfolio Management Formulas. New York: John Wiley, 1990.