Curriculum Vitaes

Yoshi Fujiwara

  (藤原 義久)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Graduate School of Information Science, University of Hyogo
Degree
Ph.D.(Mar, 1992, Tokyo Institute of Technology)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901078664135709
researchmap Member ID
6000017617

Research Interests

 2

Major Papers

 100
  • Hideaki Aoyama, Yoshi Fujiwara, Yoshimasa Hidaka, Yuichi Ikeda
    PLOS ONE, 17(8) e0273068-e0273068, Aug 22, 2022  Peer-reviewed
    Cryptoassets flow among players as recorded in the ledger of blockchain for all the transactions, comprising a network of players as nodes and flows as edges. The last decade, on the other hand, has witnessed repeating bubbles and crashes of the price of cryptoassets in exchange markets with fiat currencies and other cryptos. We study the relationship between these two important aspects of dynamics, one in the bubble/crash of price and the other in the daily network of crypto, by investigating Bitcoin and XRP. We focus on “regular players” who frequently appear on a weekly basis during a period of time including bubble/crash, and quantify each player’s role with respect to outgoing and incoming flows by defining flow-weighted frequency. During the most significant period of one-year starting from the winter of 2017, we discovered the structure of three groups of players in the diagram of flow-weighted frequency, which is common to Bitcoin and XRP in spite of the different nature of the two cryptos. By examining the identity and business activity of some regular players in the case of Bitcoin, we can observe different roles of them, namely the players balancing surplus and deficit of cryptoassets (Bal-branch), those accumulating the cryptoassets (In-branch), and those reducing it (Out-branch). Using this information, we found that the regime switching among Bal-, In-, Out-branches was presumably brought about by the regular players who are not necessarily dominant and stable in the case of Bitcoin, while such players are simply absent in the case of XRP. We further discuss how one can understand the temporal transitions among the three branches.
  • Hideaki Aoyama, Corrado Di Guilmi, Yoshi Fujiwara, Hiroshi Yoshikawa
    Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 32(5) 1419-1435, Aug 5, 2022  Peer-reviewed
    Abstract Low inflation was once welcomed by both policymakers and the public. However, Japan’s experience during the 1990s changed the consensus of economists and central banks around the world regarding prices. Facing deflation and the zero-interest bound at the same time, the Bank of Japan had difficulty conducting an effective monetary policy, making Japan’s stagnation unusually prolonged. The too-low inflation that concerns central banks today translates into the “Phillips curve puzzle.” In the United States and Japan, in the course of the recovery from the Great Recession after the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, the unemployment rate had steadily declined to a level commonly regarded as lower than the natural rate or NAIRU. However, inflation remained low. In this paper, we consider a minimal model of the dual labor market to jointly investigate how the different factors affecting the structural evolution of the labor market have contributed to the observed flattening of the Phillips curve. We find that the level of bargaining power of workers, elasticity of the supply of labor to wage in the secondary market, and composition of the workforce are the main factors jointly explaining the evidence for Japan.
  • Yoshi Fujiwara, Rubaiyat Islam
    JPS Conference Proceedings, 36 011002, Nov 11, 2021  Peer-reviewed
  • 藤原 義久
    応用物理, 90(8) 476-480, Aug, 2021  Peer-reviewedInvitedLead authorCorresponding author
  • Yoshi Fujiwara, Hiroyasu Inoue, Takayuki Yamaguchi, Hideaki Aoyama, Takuma Tanaka, Kentaro Kikuchi
    EPJ Data Science, 10(1) 19, Apr, 2021  Peer-reviewedLead author
    Abstract In this study, we investigate the flow of money among bank accounts possessed by firms in a region by employing an exhaustive list of all the bank transfers in a regional bank in Japan, to clarify how the network of money flow is related to the economic activities of the firms. The network statistics and structures are examined and shown to be similar to those of a nationwide production network. Specifically, the bowtie analysis indicates what we refer to as a “walnut” structure with core and upstream/downstream components. To quantify the location of an individual account in the network, we used the Hodge decomposition method and found that the Hodge potential of the account has a significant correlation to its position in the bowtie structure as well as to its net flow of incoming and outgoing money and links, namely the net demand/supply of individual accounts. In addition, we used non-negative matrix factorization to identify important factors underlying the entire flow of money; it can be interpreted that these factors are associated with regional economic activities. One factor has a feature whereby the remittance source is localized to the largest city in the region, while the destination is scattered. The other factors correspond to the economic activities specific to different local places. This study serves as a basis for further investigation on the relationship between money flow and economic activities of firms.
  • Hiroshi Iyetomi, Hideaki Aoyama, Yoshi Fujiwara, Wataru Souma, Irena Vodenska, Hiroshi Yoshikawa
    Scientific Reports, 10(1) 8420-8420, Dec, 2020  Peer-reviewed
    We analyze monthly time series of 57 US macroeconomic indicators (18 leading, 30 coincident, and 9 lagging) and 5 other trade/money indexes. Using novel methods, we confirm statistically significant co-movements among these time series and identify noteworthy economic events. The methods we use are Complex Hilbert Principal Component Analysis (CHPCA) and Rotational Random Shuffling (RRS). We obtain significant complex correlations among the US economic indicators with leads/lags. We then use the Hodge decomposition to obtain the hierarchical order of each time series. The Hodge potential allows us to better understand the lead/lag relationships. Using both CHPCA and Hodge decomposition approaches, we obtain a new lead/lag order of the macroeconomic indicators and perform clustering analysis for positively serially correlated positive and negative changes of the analyzed indicators. We identify collective negative co-movements around the Dot.com bubble in 2001 as well as the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in October 2008. We also identify important events such as the Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 and the Oil Price Crisis in July 2008. Additionally, we demonstrate that some coincident and lagging indicators actually show leading indicator characteristics. This suggests that there is a room for existing indicators to be improved.
  • Yoshi Fujiwara
    Progress of Theoretical Physics Supplement, 194(194) 158-164, 2012  Peer-reviewed
    After the two giant earthquakes, Kobe 1995 and East Japan 2011, a large-scale destruction took place on supplier-customer network. These primary and exogenous shocks were propagated on the production network, which caused a secondary effect resulting in chained bankruptcies. By employing data of bankrupcies occuring in a neighbor to the primarily damaged firms or regional economy, we show that the number of neighboring failures obeys a Omori law, a power-law relaxation. This finding implies that the recovery from such a huge shock on production network is much more sluggish than one can naively expect.

Misc.

 32
  • Corrado DI Guilmi, Yoshi Fujiwara
    VOX EU, Nov 29, 2022  Last author
    Recent literature has established the roles played by input-output networks and the distribution of firm size in amplifying microeconomic shocks and impacting business cycles. However, the dependencies between the network and firm size distribution are relevant to this mechanism. This column provides a framework to assess how the structure of the network affects firm size distribution in Japan. Demand shocks travel through the supply chain, amplifying the effect on downstream firms. Overall, different network structures can determine different firm size distributions.
  • Ikeda Y., Aoyama H., Iyetomi H., Fujiwara Y., Souma W., Yoshikawa H.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 67(1) 310-310, Mar 5, 2012  
  • Aoyama Hideaki, Fujiwara Yoshi, Iyetomi Hiroshi, Sato Aki-Hiro
    Progress of theoretical physics. Supplement, (194) i-ii, 2012  
  • Hideaki Aoyama, Yoshi Fujiwara, Hiroshi Iyetomi, Aki-Hiro Sato
    PROGRESS OF THEORETICAL PHYSICS SUPPLEMENT, (194) I-II, 2012  
  • Iyetomi H., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Souma W., Fujiwara Y., Yoshikawa H.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 66(2) 241-241, Aug 24, 2011  
  • Hideaki Aoyama, Yoshi Fujiwara, Yuichi Ikeda, Hiroshi Iyetomi, Wataru Souma
    Econophysics and Companies: Statistical Life and Death in Complex Business Networks, 1-234, Jan 1, 2010  
    Econophysics is an emerging interdisciplinary field that takes advantage of the concepts and methods of statistical physics to analyse economic phenomena. This book expands the explanatory scope of econophysics to the real economy by using methods from statistical physics to analyse the success and failure of companies. Using large data sets of companies and income-earners in Japan and Europe, a distinguished team of researchers show how these methods allow us to analyse companies, from huge corporations to small firms, as heterogeneous agents interacting at multiple layers of complex networks. They then show how successful this approach is in explaining a wide range of recent findings relating to the dynamics of companies. With mathematics kept to a minimum, the book is not only a lively introduction to the field of econophysics but also provides fresh insights into company behaviour.
  • Aoyama Hideaki, Fujiwara Yoshi, Iyetomi Hiroshi, Sato Aki-Hiro
    Progress of theoretical physics. Supplement, (179) i-ii, 2009  
  • FUJIWARA Yoshi, FUJITA Yuji
    23(2) 161-162, Nov 1, 2008  
  • Iyetomi H., Nakayama Y., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Souma W., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 63(2) 275-275, Aug 25, 2008  
  • FUJIWARA Yoshi
    The Computational Mechanics Conference, 2007(20) 54-55, Nov 25, 2007  
    Production network refers to a line of economic activities in which firms buy intermediate goods from "upstream" firms, put added-values on them, and sell the goods to "downstream" firms or consumers in the end of the line. The entire line of these processes of putting added-values in turn forms a giant network of production ranging from upstream to downstream, down to consumers. Each process of production also requires labor and financing as inputs. Thus, production, labor and finance are the three corner stones for all economic activities. Net sum of added values in production network is basically the net total production, that is, GDP. While production network, its structure and temporal change are crucial in understanding macro-economic dynamics, little has been hitherto studied about them. In this talk, we report on uncovered large-scale features of production network comprising of a million firms (nodes) and millions of transactions (links) among them in Japan. We also talk about applications, epsecially to the problem of chain of bankruptcies, that would be potentially derived from the network informatics of real-data.
  • Iyetomi H., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Souma W., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 62(2) 277-277, Aug 21, 2007  
  • Souma W., Fujiwara Y., Aoyama H., Iyetomi H., Ikeda Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 61(2) 181-181, Aug 18, 2006  
  • Iyetomi H., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Souma W., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 61(2) 181-181, Aug 18, 2006  
  • Ikeda Y., Aoyama H., Iyetomi H., Kaizoji T., Fujiwara Y., Souma W.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 61(1) 327-327, Mar 4, 2006  
  • Iyetomi H., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Kaizoji T., Souma W., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 61(1) 327-327, Mar 4, 2006  
  • Souma W., Aoyama H., Iyetomi H., Ikeda Y., Kaizoji T., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 61(1) 327-327, Mar 4, 2006  
  • Iyetomi H., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Kaizoji T., Soma W., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 60(2) 172-172, Aug 19, 2005  
  • Souma W., Aoyama H., Iyetomi H., Ikeda Y., Kaizoji T., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 60(1) 276-276, Mar 4, 2005  
  • Iyetomi H., Aoyama H., Ikeda Y., Kaizoji T., Soma W., Fujiwara Y.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 60(1) 275-275, Mar 4, 2005  
  • Ikeda Y., Kubo O., Kawamoto S., Kobayashi Y., Fukui C., Aoyama H., Iyetomi H., Kaizoji T., Fujiwara Y., Souma W.
    Meeting abstracts of the Physical Society of Japan, 60(1) 275-275, Mar 4, 2005  
  • SOUMA Wataru, FUJIWARA Yoshi, AOYAMA Hideaki
    IPSJ SIG Notes. ICS, 2004(85) 175-180, Aug 5, 2004  
    As complex networks in the economy, the shareholding network, which is constructed by companies and shareholding relationships, is studied. Through empirical studies, it is shown that the degree distribution of shareholding networks follows the power law distribution, P(k)〜k^<-γ>, in the large degree range. Shareholding networks are also represented by the real symmetric adjacency matrix, and it is shown that the eigenvalue distribution of this adjacency matrix follows the power law distribution, ρ(λ)〜|λ|^<-δ>, in the tail part. A scaling relation, δ=2γ-1, is found and explained by the local tree-like structure of networks.
  • FUJIWARA Yoshi, YUTA Kikuo, SHIMOHARA Katsunori
    IPSJ SIG Notes. ICS, 2004(85) 139-145, Aug 5, 2004  
    We review on utlization of random network as a null hypothesis, and talk about its applications. Reviewed are (1) generating-functional method for calculating several topological quantities of network with application to bipartite graph, (2) quantification of inter-communicties connectivity in finding communicty or cluster structure by centrality measure of betweenness. In the workshop, we will talk about our original work of application to human network and social-economic network.
  • 藤原 義久, 湯田 聴夫, 下原 勝憲
    知識ベ-スシステム研究会, 65 135-141, Aug 4, 2004  
  • MAEKAWA Satoshi, FUJIWARA Yoshi
    IEICE technical report. Neurocomputing, 102(628) 25-29, Jan 28, 2003  
    Fingers of both hands (except thumbs) are laid with palm-side down and alternatively for left and right so that tips are only visible by subject's eyes. Tactile (weak vibration) and/or visual (LED) stimuli are given to each finger at a time. Discrimination of stimulated finger is done either by moving a finger or by speaking which finger, and both by these reactions. In reaction by movement, additional visual stimulus decreased ambiguity in tactile perception in effect of shortening reaction time. Under single stimulus by tactile, ipsi-lateral fault reaction was dominant in frequency since reactions are done primarily by somatosensory information. On the other hand, under combined stimulus, contralateral fault reaction was dominant implying visual dominance. The same reaction scheme was observed for reaction by movement instantly succeeded to language reaction. By contrast, in reaction by language, visual sensory information did not affect reaction time nor frequency of fault reaction (except easily discernible little fingers placed at spatial edges) . These result suggests that language reaction is based on body-image compatible to egocentric perception of space and on somatosensory perception and visual information spontaneously constructed upon the body-image.
  • ARIMOTO Takahiko, MAEKAWA Satoshi, FUJIWARA Yoshi, KOTANI Manabu
    IEICE technical report. Neurocomputing, 101(736) 159-166, Mar 12, 2002  
    We measured surface electromyogram(EMG) data with multichannel surface electrodes(16ch arrayed by 4x4) placed on forearm. We applied a multichannel blind deconvolution method to the surface EMG signals. As a result, we obtained a few components of which firing pattern is similar to MUs. To see if they can be regarded as MUs, we examined impulse response for each component and firing intervals, and conclude that our results are consistent with physiological knowledge.
  • FUJIWARA Yoshi, MAEKAWA Satoshi
    IEICE technical report. ME and bio cybernetics, 99(82) 41-46, May 21, 1999  
    We measured EMG data of 16 channels placed and wound around a forearm of a subject who performed extension and flexion of each finger. We applied independent component analysis to data smoothed by filtering and rectification assuming that each channel-signal is a superposition of myoelectricity from extensor and flexor muscles. We could separate components that are related to fingers' motions. In addition, we did rough estimation the position of extensor and flexor muscles, which is compatible with the physiological knowledge.
  • FUJIWARA Yoshi, MAEKAWA Satoshi
    11 391-396, Jan 18, 1999  
  • MAEKAWA Satoshi, FUJIWARA Yoshi
    11 387-390, Jan 18, 1999  
  • MAEKAWA Satoshi, FUJIWARA Yoshi
    IEICE technical report. Artificial intelligence and knowledge-based processing, 98(499) 17-22, Jan 12, 1999  
    We observe from the joint probability distribution for successive logarithmic returns of daily stock prices that they are statistically dependent. We apply independent component analysis to decompose the stock price changes into independent components, and obtained the impulse response for each component. Because the impulse responses are almost orthogonal, we model it with a rotation filter. The orthogonality is compatible with vanishing autocorrelation function. On the other hand, from the phase information, we show that the rotational model can explain a long-term fine structure of the impulse response for decades of days. Thus, although the daily returns are not independent, long-term efficiency in market holds. We believe that this work observes overshoot of price change, or the so-called rational bubble. This observation might contain a useful information on heterogeneity of information and presence of arbitragers in an efficient market.
  • FUJIWARA YOSHI, SAWAI HIDEFUMI
    10 95-100, Jan 20, 1998  

Books and Other Publications

 15

Major Presentations

 9

Major Research Projects

 15

Major Industrial Property Rights

 6

Academic Activities

 2

Social Activities

 3