OPEN-SOURCE SCRIPT
Radial Basis Kernel RSI for Loop

Radial Basis Kernel RSI for Loop
What it is
An RSI-style oscillator that uses a radial basis function (RBF) kernel to compute a similarity-weighted average of gains and losses across many lookback lengths and kernel widths (γ). By averaging dozens of RSI estimates—each built with different parameters—it aims to deliver a smoother, more robust momentum signal that adapts to changing market conditions.
How it works
The script measures up/down price changes from your chosen Source (default: close).
For each combination of RSI length and Gamma (γ) in your ranges, it builds an RSI where recent bars that look most similar (by price behavior) get more weight via an RBF kernel.
It averages all those RSIs into a single value, then smooths it with your selected Moving Average type (SMA, EMA, WMA, HMA, DEMA) and a light regression-based filter for stability.
Inputs you can tune
Min/Max RSI Kernel Length & Step: Range of RSI lookbacks to include in the ensemble (e.g., 20→40 by 1) or (e.g., 30→50 by 1).
Min/Max Gamma & Step: Controls the RBF “width.” Lower γ = broader similarity (smoother); higher γ = more selective (snappier).
Source: Price series to analyze.
Overbought / Oversold levels: Defaults 70 / 30, with a midline at 50. Shaded regions help visualize extremes.
MA Type & Period (Confluence): Final smoothing on the averaged RSI line (e.g., DEMA(44) by default).
Red “OB” labels when the line crosses down from extreme highs (~80) → potential overbought fade/exit areas.
Green “OS” labels when the line crosses up from extreme lows (~20) → potential oversold bounce/entry areas.
How to use it
Treat it like RSI, but expect fewer whipsaws thanks to the ensemble and kernel weighting.
Common approaches:
Look for crosses back inside the bands (e.g., down from >70 or up from <30).
Use the 50 midline for directional bias (above = bullish momentum tilt; below = bearish).
Combine with trend filters (e.g., your chart MA) for higher-probability signals.
Performance note: This is really heavy and depending on how much time your subscription allows you could experience this timing out. Increasing the step size is the easiest way to reduce the load time.
Works on any symbol or timeframe. Like any oscillator, best used alongside price action and risk management rather than in isolation.
What it is
An RSI-style oscillator that uses a radial basis function (RBF) kernel to compute a similarity-weighted average of gains and losses across many lookback lengths and kernel widths (γ). By averaging dozens of RSI estimates—each built with different parameters—it aims to deliver a smoother, more robust momentum signal that adapts to changing market conditions.
How it works
The script measures up/down price changes from your chosen Source (default: close).
For each combination of RSI length and Gamma (γ) in your ranges, it builds an RSI where recent bars that look most similar (by price behavior) get more weight via an RBF kernel.
It averages all those RSIs into a single value, then smooths it with your selected Moving Average type (SMA, EMA, WMA, HMA, DEMA) and a light regression-based filter for stability.
Inputs you can tune
Min/Max RSI Kernel Length & Step: Range of RSI lookbacks to include in the ensemble (e.g., 20→40 by 1) or (e.g., 30→50 by 1).
Min/Max Gamma & Step: Controls the RBF “width.” Lower γ = broader similarity (smoother); higher γ = more selective (snappier).
Source: Price series to analyze.
Overbought / Oversold levels: Defaults 70 / 30, with a midline at 50. Shaded regions help visualize extremes.
MA Type & Period (Confluence): Final smoothing on the averaged RSI line (e.g., DEMA(44) by default).
Red “OB” labels when the line crosses down from extreme highs (~80) → potential overbought fade/exit areas.
Green “OS” labels when the line crosses up from extreme lows (~20) → potential oversold bounce/entry areas.
How to use it
Treat it like RSI, but expect fewer whipsaws thanks to the ensemble and kernel weighting.
Common approaches:
Look for crosses back inside the bands (e.g., down from >70 or up from <30).
Use the 50 midline for directional bias (above = bullish momentum tilt; below = bearish).
Combine with trend filters (e.g., your chart MA) for higher-probability signals.
Performance note: This is really heavy and depending on how much time your subscription allows you could experience this timing out. Increasing the step size is the easiest way to reduce the load time.
Works on any symbol or timeframe. Like any oscillator, best used alongside price action and risk management rather than in isolation.
开源脚本
本着TradingView的真正精神,此脚本的创建者将其开源,以便交易者可以查看和验证其功能。向作者致敬!虽然您可以免费使用它,但请记住,重新发布代码必须遵守我们的网站规则。
免责声明
这些信息和出版物并不意味着也不构成TradingView提供或认可的金融、投资、交易或其它类型的建议或背书。请在使用条款阅读更多信息。
开源脚本
本着TradingView的真正精神,此脚本的创建者将其开源,以便交易者可以查看和验证其功能。向作者致敬!虽然您可以免费使用它,但请记住,重新发布代码必须遵守我们的网站规则。
免责声明
这些信息和出版物并不意味着也不构成TradingView提供或认可的金融、投资、交易或其它类型的建议或背书。请在使用条款阅读更多信息。