We study infectious diseases using a Susceptible-Infected-Recovered-Deceased model with endogenous cross-region human mobility. Individuals weigh the risk of infection against economic opportunities when moving across regions. The model predicts that the mobility rate of susceptible individuals declines with a higher infection rate at the destination. With cross-region mobility, a decrease in the transmission rate or an increase in the removal rate of the virus in any region reduces the global basic reproduction number (R0). Global R0 falls between the minimum and maximum of local R0s. A new method of Normalized Hat Algebra is developed to solve the model dynamics. Simulations indicate that a decrease in global R0 does not always imply a lo...
The reproduction number of an infectious disease, such as CoViD-19, can be described through a modif...
The world population increased from 4 billion people in 1974 to 7.8 billion people in 2020 and conti...
Funding Information: This research was supported by a JSPS Grant-in-aid for scientific research (KAK...
We study infectious diseases using a Susceptible-Infected-Recovered-Deceased model with endogenous c...
The spatiotemporal propagation patterns of recent infectious diseases, originated as localized epide...
The outbreak of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 started in Wuhan, China, towards...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
Human mobility is an important driver of geographic spread of infectious pathogens. Detailed informa...
This paper models how migration both influences and responds to differences in disease prevalence be...
With the outbreak of Covid-19 it has become more important to know how to deal with a large scale ep...
This paper models how migration both influences and responds to differences in disease prevalence be...
The understanding of human mobility and the development of qualitative models as well as quantitativ...
The COVID-19 pandemic has created an urgent need for mathematical models that can project epidemic t...
The 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak has become a worldwide problem. Due to global...
Human mobility, contact patterns, and their interplay are key aspects of our social behavior that sh...
The reproduction number of an infectious disease, such as CoViD-19, can be described through a modif...
The world population increased from 4 billion people in 1974 to 7.8 billion people in 2020 and conti...
Funding Information: This research was supported by a JSPS Grant-in-aid for scientific research (KAK...
We study infectious diseases using a Susceptible-Infected-Recovered-Deceased model with endogenous c...
The spatiotemporal propagation patterns of recent infectious diseases, originated as localized epide...
The outbreak of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 started in Wuhan, China, towards...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
Human mobility is an important driver of geographic spread of infectious pathogens. Detailed informa...
This paper models how migration both influences and responds to differences in disease prevalence be...
With the outbreak of Covid-19 it has become more important to know how to deal with a large scale ep...
This paper models how migration both influences and responds to differences in disease prevalence be...
The understanding of human mobility and the development of qualitative models as well as quantitativ...
The COVID-19 pandemic has created an urgent need for mathematical models that can project epidemic t...
The 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak has become a worldwide problem. Due to global...
Human mobility, contact patterns, and their interplay are key aspects of our social behavior that sh...
The reproduction number of an infectious disease, such as CoViD-19, can be described through a modif...
The world population increased from 4 billion people in 1974 to 7.8 billion people in 2020 and conti...
Funding Information: This research was supported by a JSPS Grant-in-aid for scientific research (KAK...