Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individuals during the initial stages of an epidemic can be well approximated by a branching process, after which the proportion of individuals that are susceptible follows a more or less deterministic course. In this paper, we show that both of these features are consequences of assuming a locally branching structure in the models, and that the deterministic course can itself be determined from the distribution of the limiting random variable associated with the backward, susceptibility branching process. Examples considered include a stochastic version of the Kermack & McKendrick model, the Reed–Frost model, and the Volz configuration model
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
Analytical approximations have generated many insights into the dynamics of epidemics, but there is ...
In this paper we consider a model for the spread of a stochastic SIR (Susceptible → Infectious → Rec...
Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individu...
Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individu...
Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individu...
Branching process approximation to the initial stages of an epidemic process has been used since the...
© 2017, The Author(s). Recent years have seen a large amount of interest in epidemics on networks as...
Recent years have seen a large amount of interest in epidemics on networks as a way of representing ...
This paper considers applications of branching processes to a model for the spread of an SIR (suscep...
A Markovian SIR (Susceptible – Infectious - Recovered) model is considered for the spread of an epid...
AbstractThe paper is concerned with refining two well-known approximations to the Reed–Frost epidemi...
This paper is concerned with the approximation of early stages of epidemic processes by branching pr...
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
Analytical approximations have generated many insights into the dynamics of epidemics, but there is ...
In this paper we consider a model for the spread of a stochastic SIR (Susceptible → Infectious → Rec...
Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individu...
Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individu...
Many models of epidemic spread have a common qualitative structure. The numbers of infected individu...
Branching process approximation to the initial stages of an epidemic process has been used since the...
© 2017, The Author(s). Recent years have seen a large amount of interest in epidemics on networks as...
Recent years have seen a large amount of interest in epidemics on networks as a way of representing ...
This paper considers applications of branching processes to a model for the spread of an SIR (suscep...
A Markovian SIR (Susceptible – Infectious - Recovered) model is considered for the spread of an epid...
AbstractThe paper is concerned with refining two well-known approximations to the Reed–Frost epidemi...
This paper is concerned with the approximation of early stages of epidemic processes by branching pr...
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
This thesis considers stochastic epidemic models for the spread of epidemics in structured populatio...
Analytical approximations have generated many insights into the dynamics of epidemics, but there is ...
In this paper we consider a model for the spread of a stochastic SIR (Susceptible → Infectious → Rec...