The susceptible-transmissible-removed (STR) model is a deterministic compartment model, based on the susceptible-infected-removed (SIR) prototype. The STR replaces 2 SIR assumptions. SIR assumes that the emigration rate (due to death or recovery) is directly proportional to the infected compartment's size. The STR replaces this assumption with the biologically appropriate assumption that the emigration rate is the same as the immigration rate one infected period ago. This results in a unique delay differential equation epidemic model with the delay equal to the infected period. Hamer's mass action law for epidemiology is modified to resemble its chemistry precursor -- the law of mass action. Constructing the model for an isolated popula...
With the vaccination against Covid-19 now available, how vaccination campaigns influence the mathema...
With the vaccination against Covid-19 now available, how vaccination campaigns influence the mathema...
Recently, Clancy [SIR epidemic models with general infectious period distribution, Statist. Prob. Le...
A very simple epidemic model proposed a century ago is the linchpin of the current mathematical mode...
Mathematical modeling is an essential tool in epidemiology. Models are constructed to describe the s...
Compartmental models in epidemiology characterize the spread of an infectious disease by formulating...
Compartmental transmission models have become an invaluable tool to study the dynamics of infectious...
In-host mutation of a cross-species infectious disease to a form that is transmissible between human...
The classical susceptible-infectious-recovered (SIR) model, originated from the seminal papers of Ro...
In this paper, we study the effectiveness of the modelling approach on the pandemic due to the sprea...
The susceptible-infected-removed (SIR) model characterizes an epidemic via a set of differential eq...
When an infectious disease propagates throughout society, the incidence function may rise at first d...
In Fall 2020, several European countries reported rapid increases in COVID-19 cases along with growi...
When an infectious disease propagates throughout society, the incidence function may rise at first d...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
With the vaccination against Covid-19 now available, how vaccination campaigns influence the mathema...
With the vaccination against Covid-19 now available, how vaccination campaigns influence the mathema...
Recently, Clancy [SIR epidemic models with general infectious period distribution, Statist. Prob. Le...
A very simple epidemic model proposed a century ago is the linchpin of the current mathematical mode...
Mathematical modeling is an essential tool in epidemiology. Models are constructed to describe the s...
Compartmental models in epidemiology characterize the spread of an infectious disease by formulating...
Compartmental transmission models have become an invaluable tool to study the dynamics of infectious...
In-host mutation of a cross-species infectious disease to a form that is transmissible between human...
The classical susceptible-infectious-recovered (SIR) model, originated from the seminal papers of Ro...
In this paper, we study the effectiveness of the modelling approach on the pandemic due to the sprea...
The susceptible-infected-removed (SIR) model characterizes an epidemic via a set of differential eq...
When an infectious disease propagates throughout society, the incidence function may rise at first d...
In Fall 2020, several European countries reported rapid increases in COVID-19 cases along with growi...
When an infectious disease propagates throughout society, the incidence function may rise at first d...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
With the vaccination against Covid-19 now available, how vaccination campaigns influence the mathema...
With the vaccination against Covid-19 now available, how vaccination campaigns influence the mathema...
Recently, Clancy [SIR epidemic models with general infectious period distribution, Statist. Prob. Le...