Fig. 1: Elliott waves of smallest degree or dimension (sub-waves; cyan) are shown along with the waves of higher degree (waves, blue; super-waves, red). | Translational Psychiatry

Fig. 1: Elliott waves of smallest degree or dimension (sub-waves; cyan) are shown along with the waves of higher degree (waves, blue; super-waves, red).

From: Is the worst of the COVID-19 global pandemic yet to come? Application of financial mathematics as candidate predictive tools

Fig. 1

i, iii, v are impulses of the smallest dimension; 1, 3, 5 are impulses of next higher dimension; I is the impulse of next higher dimension. Similarly, ii and iv are correctives of the smallest dimension, 2 and 4 are correctives of the next higher dimension, and II is the corrective of next higher dimension. Impulses (e.g., I) are made up of 5 waves of lesser dimension (i.e., 1, 2, 3, 4, 5), while correctives (e.g., II) are made up of 3 waves of lesser dimension (i.e., A, B, C).

Back to article page