Heterogeneity plays an important role in the emergence, persistence and control of infectious diseases. Metapopulation models are often used to describe spatial heterogeneity, and the transition from random- to heterogeneous-mixing is made by incorporating the interaction, or coupling, within and between subpopulations. However, such couplings are difficult to measure explicitly; instead, their action through the correlations between subpopulations is often all that can be observed. We use moment-closure methods to investigate how the coupling and resulting correlation are related, considering systems of multiple identical interacting populations on highly symmetric complex networks: the complete network, the k-regular tree network, and the...
Human mobility, contact patterns, and their interplay are key aspects of our social behavior that sh...
The compartmental models used to study epidemic spreading often assume the same susceptibility for a...
Networks and the epidemiology of directly transmitted infectious diseases are fundamentally linked. ...
It is increasingly apparent that heterogeneity in the interaction between individuals plays an impor...
An ongoing challenge in metapopulation modelling of infectious diseases is how to infer the coupling...
Realistic human contact networks capable of spreading infectious disease, for example studied in soc...
While the foundations of modern epidemiology are based upon deterministic models with homogeneous mi...
Understanding the spread of diseases through complex networks is of great interest where realistic, ...
A basic assumption of many epidemic models is that populations are composed of a homogeneous group o...
textThis work comprises three projects that extend previous models to include features of practical ...
Erik M. Volz is with University of Michigan, Joel C. Miller is with Harvard University and the Natio...
Networks and the epidemiology of directly transmitted infectious diseases are fundamentally linked. ...
We present a thorough inspection of the dynamical behavior of epidemic phenomena in populations with...
One major aim of statistics is to systematically study outcomes of interest in a population by obser...
The dynamic nature of contact patterns creates diverse temporal structures. In particular, empirical...
Human mobility, contact patterns, and their interplay are key aspects of our social behavior that sh...
The compartmental models used to study epidemic spreading often assume the same susceptibility for a...
Networks and the epidemiology of directly transmitted infectious diseases are fundamentally linked. ...
It is increasingly apparent that heterogeneity in the interaction between individuals plays an impor...
An ongoing challenge in metapopulation modelling of infectious diseases is how to infer the coupling...
Realistic human contact networks capable of spreading infectious disease, for example studied in soc...
While the foundations of modern epidemiology are based upon deterministic models with homogeneous mi...
Understanding the spread of diseases through complex networks is of great interest where realistic, ...
A basic assumption of many epidemic models is that populations are composed of a homogeneous group o...
textThis work comprises three projects that extend previous models to include features of practical ...
Erik M. Volz is with University of Michigan, Joel C. Miller is with Harvard University and the Natio...
Networks and the epidemiology of directly transmitted infectious diseases are fundamentally linked. ...
We present a thorough inspection of the dynamical behavior of epidemic phenomena in populations with...
One major aim of statistics is to systematically study outcomes of interest in a population by obser...
The dynamic nature of contact patterns creates diverse temporal structures. In particular, empirical...
Human mobility, contact patterns, and their interplay are key aspects of our social behavior that sh...
The compartmental models used to study epidemic spreading often assume the same susceptibility for a...
Networks and the epidemiology of directly transmitted infectious diseases are fundamentally linked. ...