AbstractIn this paper, we introduced the geographical effect into susceptible-infected-susceptible (SIS) model on a growing network proposed by Xie et al. [Phys. Rev. E 75 (2007) 036106] to investigate the effect of geographical distance on epidemic spreading. In our SIS model, the susceptible individual i can be infected by infectious neighbors with probability θi:θi=1−∏j∈N(i)(1−λj),λj=min(1,λ0×(dij/mink∈N(i)(dik))−β), where λ0 is the average transmission rate of the virus, j is one of the infected neighbors (N(i)) of susceptible individual i,λj is transmission rate of individual j, dij is Euclidean distance between individual i and j, and β is the tunable parameter. Simulation results show that the steady density of infected individuals m...
Transmission of infectious diseases between immobile hosts (e.g., plants, farms) is strongly depende...
In social networks, the age and the region of individuals are the two most important factors in mode...
In this article, we proposed a susceptible-infected model with identical infectivity, in which, at e...
Many real networks are embedded in a metric space: the interactions among individuals depend on thei...
In this paper we create a new model of disease transmission that combines a branching process from e...
We study geographical effects on the spread of diseases in lattice-embedded scale-free networks. The...
By incorporating segregated spatial domain and individual-based linkage into the SIS (susceptible-in...
One of the central goals of mathematical epidemiology is to predict disease transmission patterns in...
It is very important to investigate the multiple spreaders' effects since the spreading phenomenon i...
The study analyses the role of long-distance travel behaviours on the large-scale spatial spreading ...
In recent years, serious infectious diseases tend to transcend national borders and widely spread in...
Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature. Fund ing was pr...
We investigate a model for spatial epidemics explicitly taking into account bidirectional movements ...
We investigate a model for spatial epidemics explicitly taking into account bidirectional movements ...
In this paper, we propose a Boltzmann-type kinetic model of the spreading of an infectious disease o...
Transmission of infectious diseases between immobile hosts (e.g., plants, farms) is strongly depende...
In social networks, the age and the region of individuals are the two most important factors in mode...
In this article, we proposed a susceptible-infected model with identical infectivity, in which, at e...
Many real networks are embedded in a metric space: the interactions among individuals depend on thei...
In this paper we create a new model of disease transmission that combines a branching process from e...
We study geographical effects on the spread of diseases in lattice-embedded scale-free networks. The...
By incorporating segregated spatial domain and individual-based linkage into the SIS (susceptible-in...
One of the central goals of mathematical epidemiology is to predict disease transmission patterns in...
It is very important to investigate the multiple spreaders' effects since the spreading phenomenon i...
The study analyses the role of long-distance travel behaviours on the large-scale spatial spreading ...
In recent years, serious infectious diseases tend to transcend national borders and widely spread in...
Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature. Fund ing was pr...
We investigate a model for spatial epidemics explicitly taking into account bidirectional movements ...
We investigate a model for spatial epidemics explicitly taking into account bidirectional movements ...
In this paper, we propose a Boltzmann-type kinetic model of the spreading of an infectious disease o...
Transmission of infectious diseases between immobile hosts (e.g., plants, farms) is strongly depende...
In social networks, the age and the region of individuals are the two most important factors in mode...
In this article, we proposed a susceptible-infected model with identical infectivity, in which, at e...