AbstractMarket trade-routes can support infectious-disease transmission, impacting biological populations and even disrupting trade that conduces the disease. Epidemiological models increasingly account for reductions in infectious contact, such as risk-aversion behaviour in response to pathogen outbreaks. However, responses in market dynamics clearly differ from simple risk aversion, as are driven by other motivation and conditioned by “friction” constraints (a term we borrow from labour economics). Consequently, the propagation of epidemics in markets of, for example livestock, is frictional due to time and cost limitations in the production and exchange of potentially infectious goods. Here we develop a coupled economic-epidemiological m...
We develop and apply analytically tractable generativemodels of livestock movements at national scal...
Infections can spread among livestock notably because infected animals can be brought to uncontamina...
Disease emergence in livestock is a product of environment, epidemiology and economic forces. The en...
Market trade-routes can support infectious-disease transmission, impacting biological populations an...
AbstractMarket trade-routes can support infectious-disease transmission, impacting biological popula...
Conventional epidemiological studies of infections spreading through trade networks, e.g. via livest...
The endogenous adaptation of economic agents, that may adjust their trade network in response to inf...
An outbreak of foot and mouth disease (FMD) can distort livestock markets. In this paper we have sim...
We introduce a game inspired by the challenges of disease management in livestock farming and the tr...
Trade is a complex, multi-faceted process that can contribute to the spread and persistence of disea...
The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long studied for purposes of estimating t...
International audienceInfections can spread among livestock notably because infected animals can be ...
The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long studied for purposes of estimating t...
We develop and apply analytically tractable generativemodels of livestock movements at national scal...
Infections can spread among livestock notably because infected animals can be brought to uncontamina...
Disease emergence in livestock is a product of environment, epidemiology and economic forces. The en...
Market trade-routes can support infectious-disease transmission, impacting biological populations an...
AbstractMarket trade-routes can support infectious-disease transmission, impacting biological popula...
Conventional epidemiological studies of infections spreading through trade networks, e.g. via livest...
The endogenous adaptation of economic agents, that may adjust their trade network in response to inf...
An outbreak of foot and mouth disease (FMD) can distort livestock markets. In this paper we have sim...
We introduce a game inspired by the challenges of disease management in livestock farming and the tr...
Trade is a complex, multi-faceted process that can contribute to the spread and persistence of disea...
The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long studied for purposes of estimating t...
International audienceInfections can spread among livestock notably because infected animals can be ...
The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long studied for purposes of estimating t...
We develop and apply analytically tractable generativemodels of livestock movements at national scal...
Infections can spread among livestock notably because infected animals can be brought to uncontamina...
Disease emergence in livestock is a product of environment, epidemiology and economic forces. The en...