Description
This thesis serves as an experimental investigation into the potential of machine learning through attempting to predict the future price of a cryptocurrency. Through the use of web scraping, short interval data was collected on both Bitcoin and Dogecoin. Dogecoin was the dataset that was eventually used in this thesis due to its relative stability compared to Bitcoin. At the time of the data collection, Bitcoin became a much more frequent topic in the media and had more significant fluctuations due to it. The data was processed into consistent three separate, consistent timesteps, and used to generate predictive models. The models were able to accurately predict test data given all the preceding test data but were unable to autoregressively predict future data given only the first set of test data points. Ultimately, this project helps illustrate the complexities of extended future price prediction when using simple models like linear regression.
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Details
Title
- The Efficacy of Different Timesteps in Data when Predicting Cryptocurrency Prices
Contributors
- Murwin, Andrew (Author)
- Bryan, Chris (Thesis director)
- Ghayekhloo, Samira (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- Computer Science and Engineering Program (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2022-12
Resource Type
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