Influenza in humans is characterised by strongly annual dynamics and antigenic evolution leading to partial escape from prior host immunity. The variability of new epidemic strains depends on the amount of virus currently circulating. In this paper, the amount of antigenic variation produced each year is dependent on the epidemic size. Our model reduces to a one-dimensional map and a full mathematical analysis is presented. This simple system suggests some basic principles which may be more generally applicable. In particular, for diseases with antigenic drift, vaccination may be doubly beneficial. Not only does it protect the population through classical herd immunity, but the overall case reduction reduces the chance of new variants being...
Abstract Background Protective antibody immunity against the influenza A virus wanes in 2–7 years du...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
Influenza in humans is characterised by strongly annual dynamics and antigenic evolution leading to ...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a ‘‘continuous antigenic dr...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
online Article Number: e7426International audienceThe recurrence of influenza A epidemics has origin...
In this paper we explore the consequences of a heterogeneous immune response in individuals on the e...
The antigenic drift theory states that influenza evolves via the gradual accumulation of mutations, ...
It is commonly believed that influenza epidemics arise through the incremental accumulation of viral...
In this thesis we develop a mathematical cross-scale model for the evolution of influenza within a s...
Abstract Background Protective antibody immunity against the influenza A virus wanes in 2–7 years du...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
Influenza in humans is characterised by strongly annual dynamics and antigenic evolution leading to ...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a ‘‘continuous antigenic dr...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
online Article Number: e7426International audienceThe recurrence of influenza A epidemics has origin...
In this paper we explore the consequences of a heterogeneous immune response in individuals on the e...
The antigenic drift theory states that influenza evolves via the gradual accumulation of mutations, ...
It is commonly believed that influenza epidemics arise through the incremental accumulation of viral...
In this thesis we develop a mathematical cross-scale model for the evolution of influenza within a s...
Abstract Background Protective antibody immunity against the influenza A virus wanes in 2–7 years du...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...