How nice would it be to use Matlab or similar matrix based manipulations to have price data represented in the frequency domain?
You may be in the wrong place
Dr. Evil, it has been already done.
How nice would it be to use Matlab or similar matrix based manipulations to have price data represented in the frequency domain?
You may be in the wrong place
I hear ya. No, I didn't expect you to show your hands.
I'm also interested in including some type of stats into my current strategy but I question whether you can formulate a "pure" stat without any ties to price action. For example, "buy when price crossed above MA(20)" or "buy when close is above close of yesterday" are PA-based. But "buy when the mean or median of 20-period is 2% above close of x-days ago" might not be. I'm mostly interested in formulating volatility/momentum into the equation. Any suggestion for this noob?

There are numerous books on the topic. Just search for statistical learning or statistical pattern recognition or (nonlinear) time series and you will find multiple books (Amazon) and web pages. Unfortunately most of them are not in human readable form due to the fact that academia tends to make relatively simple things complicated for outsiders.
I found that some of the books that are written for R or Python users tend to be more reader friendly. I guess machine learning also includes statistical learning since it is general term and you can include it in your searches as well. For basics in machine learning I would suggest Machine Learning in Action.
There are relatively cheap ebooks on Amazon and elsewhere for few $ like Introductory R: A beginner's guide, 100 statistical tests in R and others; just to give you some ideas. There are also books addressing financial markets directly like Python for Finance (there are others like this for R, #F, Haskell, C++) and some of them include statistical concepts applied to markets. I am not recommending all of them since they may not suit your needs. Some are not that good except for few more or less useful chapters or they might be too difficult despite the fact that those were written for people without advanced degree in math or statistics.
I think just searching and skimming through table of contents and few pages available for preview gives some idea if it is useful and as a bonus it can narrow your search criteria.
Unfortunately I cannot recommend single best resource and I am not an expert in statistics nor I apply it directly to market data but rather use it as a set of utility tools.
Hello traders.
I'm curious if there are any resources, either online or in books, where I could perhaps get some further inspiration or ideas on the topic?
I have a webinar video on the NinjaTrader partners channel, from March 2015 (I think), in which I did provide a lot of information re. my approach to it. Unfortunately, on top of my ESL accent, the audio is really bad, which makes going through the entire recording a big annoyance, but if you can do it, I guarantee you'll get access to a lot of valuable information.
As for your post mentioning a "pattern" with a sample size of 10, no matter the win%, consider that as noise.

I would be very interested in looking at this. Thanks! Where can I find this? Would this be their Youtube channel?


Maybe this makes me an asshole, but that video seems to be a sales pitch?
I'm also reasoning that if someone has a really, really good system, they would never fully disclose it in public or sell it. Instead, they would trade it themselves to become filthy rich. With a really good system, you should be able to scale up fairly quickly even starting with a small size account.
Or am I missing something?
I would never sell my own system if it was a good one.