Unlike equilibrium systems, where it is possible to study the impact of endogenous and exogenous perturbations using fluctuation-dissipation theorems, it is difficult to understand and predict the impact of shocks in out-of-equilibrium systems. This thesis tries to uncover and quantify the epidemic processes in out-of-equilibrium self-organizing systems of both endogenous and exogenous origin. We address the questions using massive datasets from social, biological, and physical systems and quantify the endogenous and exogenous origin of contagion. We further extend our discussion on how to build robust data aggregation systems to obtain and process large datasets to better understand the out of equilibrium systems. In the first part of the ...
Records of social interactions provide us with new sources of data for understanding how interaction...
The spread of an epidemic disease and the population’s collective behavioural response are deeply in...
Motivated by epidemics such as COVID-19, we study the spread of a contagious disease when behavior r...
The complexity of interaction patterns among individuals in social systems plays a fundamental role ...
Various phenomena in our daily world exhibit similarities to epidemic spreading. Fashion or technica...
Notwithstanding a significant understanding of epidemic processes in biological, social, financial, ...
In recent years the research community has accumulated overwhelming evidence for the emergence of co...
The development of quantitative models of outbreaks is key to their eventual control, from human and...
We investigate the susceptible–infectious–recovered contagion dynamics in a system of self-propelled...
The spreading dynamics of an epidemic and the collective behavioral pattern of the population over w...
Records of social interactions provide us with new sources of data for understanding how interaction...
Most epidemic spreading models assume memoryless systems and statistically independent infections. N...
The spreading of contagions can exhibit a percolation transition, which separates transitory prevale...
Records of social interactions provide us with new sources of data for understanding how interaction...
The spread of an epidemic disease and the population’s collective behavioural response are deeply in...
Motivated by epidemics such as COVID-19, we study the spread of a contagious disease when behavior r...
The complexity of interaction patterns among individuals in social systems plays a fundamental role ...
Various phenomena in our daily world exhibit similarities to epidemic spreading. Fashion or technica...
Notwithstanding a significant understanding of epidemic processes in biological, social, financial, ...
In recent years the research community has accumulated overwhelming evidence for the emergence of co...
The development of quantitative models of outbreaks is key to their eventual control, from human and...
We investigate the susceptible–infectious–recovered contagion dynamics in a system of self-propelled...
The spreading dynamics of an epidemic and the collective behavioral pattern of the population over w...
Records of social interactions provide us with new sources of data for understanding how interaction...
Most epidemic spreading models assume memoryless systems and statistically independent infections. N...
The spreading of contagions can exhibit a percolation transition, which separates transitory prevale...
Records of social interactions provide us with new sources of data for understanding how interaction...
The spread of an epidemic disease and the population’s collective behavioural response are deeply in...
Motivated by epidemics such as COVID-19, we study the spread of a contagious disease when behavior r...