The 2011 Socionomics Summit in Atlanta: It will change that way you think about markets

The Socionomics Conference offers the latest insights from this groundbreaking new science.

Socionomics is the fruition of Bob Prechter’s insight regarding social mood. This comprehensive theory is helping investors connect the dots from the past to the future to where they are right now. In this first-ever Socionomics Conference, Prechter will host speakers who are using socionomics in their work and research. Elliott Wave International has made it as easy as possible to attend — including an exceptional price, convenient travel access (Atlanta), and a venue close to the airport. Click here for information.


The coming 2011 Socionomics Summit on April 16 in Atlanta will indeed discover "New Horizons" — which is precisely what this emerging science has done time and again in recent years.

Attendees will be able to hear, ask questions of, and mingle with 14 of the foremost academics, writers and researchers who contribute to the science of socionomics. Even now, their innovative work is helping to define the critical role that social mood plays in human affairs. The featured speakers include:

  • Successful hedge fund manager Scott Reamer
  • Indiana University professors Johan Bollen and Huina Mao, contributing authors of the widely-reported academic paper "Twitter mood predicts the stock market"
  • Scholar and best-selling author of Mood Matters, John Casti
  • Emmy award-winning Minyanville sage Kevin Depew
  • The man who discovered socionomics, Robert Prechter

This list is just the beginning. Speakers also include the Socionomics Institute’s research fellow at the University of Cambridge, Matt Lampert, as well as in-house researchers Alan Hall and Euan Wilson, whose research continues to demonstrate how social mood drives social action.

Please know that the phrase "new horizons" is no exaggeration. As published in The Socionomist, our recent studies of social mood have anticipated a mind-boggling series of global trends and events:

  • "War and Peace in the Middle East" (Dec. 2010) was weeks ahead of the violence and shockwaves of protest that changed the political landscapes of Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Libya and beyond.
  • "Authoritarianism" (April 2010) forecasted increased internet regulation and warned of a possible cyber war — months before the WikiLeaks controversy broke.
  • "The Coming Collapse of Modern Prohibition" (July 2009) anticipated the dramatic escalation of violence in Mexico’s deadly drug war. It also called for growing American tolerance of marijuana use.
  • "Authoritarianism" (April 2010) warned of unprecedented new forms of government control even in ostensibly free countries like the U.S. Since then, news events include the advent of secret government GPS controls on cars, airport pat-downs and document checks on train travel inside U.S. borders.
  • "The Developing European Tinderbox" (Dec. 2009) preceded the biggest story in Europe in 2010 — the re-kindling of old ethnic and national hostilities and the possible coming dissolution of the euro.

For more information about the 2011 Socionomics Summit: New Horizons in the Study of Social Mood, simply follow this link.

About the Publisher, Elliott Wave International
Founded in 1979 by Robert R. Prechter Jr., Elliott Wave International (EWI) is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private around the world.