Networks are often used to model the contact processes that allow pathogens to spread between hosts but it remains unclear which models best describe these networks. One question is whether clustering in networks, roughly defined as the propensity for triangles to form, affects the dynamics of disease spread. We perform a simulation study to see if there is a signal in epidemic transmission trees of clustering. We simulate susceptible-exposed-infectious-removed (SEIR) epidemics (with no re-infection) over networks with fixed degree sequences but different levels of clustering and compare trees from networks with the same degree sequence and different clustering levels. We find that the variation of such trees simulated on networks with diff...
Realistic human contact networks capable of spreading infectious disease, for example studied in soc...
An epidemic spreading through a network of regular, repeated, contacts behaves differently from one ...
It is widely known that the spread of the human immunodeficiency virus was slower than exponential i...
It is now well appreciated that population structure can have a major impact on disease dynamics, ou...
Networks provide a mathematically rich framework to represent social contacts sufficient for the tra...
We consider previously proposed procedures for generating clustered networks and investigate how the...
International audienceMotivated by the analysis of social networks, we study a model of random netwo...
We consider previously proposed procedures for generating clustered networks and investigate how the...
We consider previously proposed procedures for generating clustered networks and investigate how the...
Clustering is typically measured by the ratio of triangles to all triples regardless of whether open...
We investigate the effects of heterogeneous and clustered contact patterns on the timescale and fina...
The spread of infectious diseases fundamentally depends on the pattern of contacts between individua...
An epidemic spreading through a network of regular, repeated, contacts behaves differently from one ...
We will first provide a brief introduction to models of disease transmission on so-called contact ne...
AbstractClustering is typically measured by the ratio of triangles to all triples regardless of whet...
Realistic human contact networks capable of spreading infectious disease, for example studied in soc...
An epidemic spreading through a network of regular, repeated, contacts behaves differently from one ...
It is widely known that the spread of the human immunodeficiency virus was slower than exponential i...
It is now well appreciated that population structure can have a major impact on disease dynamics, ou...
Networks provide a mathematically rich framework to represent social contacts sufficient for the tra...
We consider previously proposed procedures for generating clustered networks and investigate how the...
International audienceMotivated by the analysis of social networks, we study a model of random netwo...
We consider previously proposed procedures for generating clustered networks and investigate how the...
We consider previously proposed procedures for generating clustered networks and investigate how the...
Clustering is typically measured by the ratio of triangles to all triples regardless of whether open...
We investigate the effects of heterogeneous and clustered contact patterns on the timescale and fina...
The spread of infectious diseases fundamentally depends on the pattern of contacts between individua...
An epidemic spreading through a network of regular, repeated, contacts behaves differently from one ...
We will first provide a brief introduction to models of disease transmission on so-called contact ne...
AbstractClustering is typically measured by the ratio of triangles to all triples regardless of whet...
Realistic human contact networks capable of spreading infectious disease, for example studied in soc...
An epidemic spreading through a network of regular, repeated, contacts behaves differently from one ...
It is widely known that the spread of the human immunodeficiency virus was slower than exponential i...