Background: Humans struggle to grasp the extent of exponential growth, which is essential to comprehend the spread of an infectious disease. Exponential growth bias is the tendency to linearize exponential functions when assessing them intuitively. Effective public health communication about the nonlinear nature of infectious diseases has strong implications for the public’s compliance with strict restrictions. However, there is a lack of synthesized knowledge on the communication of the exponential growth of infectious diseases and on the outcomes of exponential growth bias. Objective: This systematic review identifies, evaluates, and synthesizes the findings of empirical studies on exponential growth bias of infectious diseases. Methods: ...
INTRODUCTION: High quality epidemic forecasting and prediction are critical to support response to l...
This paper is concerned with estimation of the within-household infection rate λL for a susceptible ...
NGR reports funding by NIGMS grant R35GM119582. BMA is supported by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundatio...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon whereby humans underestimate exponential growth. In the co...
Objective We define prediction bias as the systematic error arising from an incorrect prediction of...
AbstractThe increasing use of mathematical models for epidemic forecasting has highlighted the impor...
Humans have difficulties grasping the notion of exponential growth and often underestimate the accum...
This paper shows some views on the mathematical structure of the diffusion of the Coronavirus (COVID...
People use shortcuts to make decisions to efficiently deal with a large volume of information. Linea...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...
Background A better characterization of the early growth dynamics of an epidemic is needed to dissec...
Exponential growth is frequently underestimated, an error that can have a heavy social cost in the c...
AbstractBackgroundA better characterization of the early growth dynamics of an epidemic is needed to...
INTRODUCTION: Pooling (or combining) and analysing observational, longitudinal data at the individua...
Summary statistics, often derived from simplified models of epidemic spread, inform public health po...
INTRODUCTION: High quality epidemic forecasting and prediction are critical to support response to l...
This paper is concerned with estimation of the within-household infection rate λL for a susceptible ...
NGR reports funding by NIGMS grant R35GM119582. BMA is supported by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundatio...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon whereby humans underestimate exponential growth. In the co...
Objective We define prediction bias as the systematic error arising from an incorrect prediction of...
AbstractThe increasing use of mathematical models for epidemic forecasting has highlighted the impor...
Humans have difficulties grasping the notion of exponential growth and often underestimate the accum...
This paper shows some views on the mathematical structure of the diffusion of the Coronavirus (COVID...
People use shortcuts to make decisions to efficiently deal with a large volume of information. Linea...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...
Background A better characterization of the early growth dynamics of an epidemic is needed to dissec...
Exponential growth is frequently underestimated, an error that can have a heavy social cost in the c...
AbstractBackgroundA better characterization of the early growth dynamics of an epidemic is needed to...
INTRODUCTION: Pooling (or combining) and analysing observational, longitudinal data at the individua...
Summary statistics, often derived from simplified models of epidemic spread, inform public health po...
INTRODUCTION: High quality epidemic forecasting and prediction are critical to support response to l...
This paper is concerned with estimation of the within-household infection rate λL for a susceptible ...
NGR reports funding by NIGMS grant R35GM119582. BMA is supported by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundatio...