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Paper three is the one with the widest implications. The attention saturation threshold formalises something traders have felt intuitively for years: the market processes diverse information efficiently until everyone starts watching the same thing, then it stops being a market and becomes a crowd. "The most dangerous regime transition arrives when standard indicators are quiet" maps directly onto the sandpile literature. the eerie calm before the threshold breach is the system loading energy into a single correlated position.

Paper two connects to this. Erratic Treasury communication acts as an attention synchroniser, forcing every bond investor to watch the same signal simultaneously. When high-debt fiscal policy becomes the single shared narrative that paper three describes, the yield curve becomes the sandpile. Both papers are really about the same phenomenon, the point where information diversity collapses into narrative monoculture and the market mechanism fails.

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