The recurrent infectious diseases and their increasing impact on the society has promoted the study of strategies to slow down the epidemic spreading. In this review we outline the applications of percolation theory to describe strategies against epidemic spreading on complex networks. We give a general outlook of the relation between link percolation and the susceptible-infected-recovered model, and introduce the node void percolation process to describe the dilution of the network composed by healthy individual, i.e., the network that sustain the functionality of a society. Then, we survey two strategies: the quenched disorder strategy where an heterogeneous distribution of contact intensities is induced in society, and the intermittent ...
The fight against epidemics/pandemics is one of man versus nature. Technological advances have not ...
<div><p>In this work, we study the evolution of the susceptible individuals during the spread of an ...
How does social distancing affect the reach of an epidemic in social networks? We present Monte Carl...
The recurrent infectious diseases and their increasing impact on the society has promoted the study ...
Human mobility is an important factor in the propagation of infectious diseases. In particular, the ...
This thesis studies dynamics and control of epidemic spreading in complex networks especially scale-...
In real social networks, person-to-person interactions are known to be heterogeneous, which can affe...
The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we develop a self-organized method which...
The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we develop a self-organized method which...
The epidemic threshold of a social system is the ratio of infection and recovery rate above which a ...
We introduce a dynamic process of epidemic spreading into interdependent networks because, in realit...
Many real-world networks display a community structure. We study two random graph models that create...
In many real-world complex systems, individuals have many kinds of interactions among them, suggesti...
How do we best constrain social interactions to decrease transmission of communicable diseases? Indi...
This dissertation contributes to a methodology and a better understanding that can be used to study ...
The fight against epidemics/pandemics is one of man versus nature. Technological advances have not ...
<div><p>In this work, we study the evolution of the susceptible individuals during the spread of an ...
How does social distancing affect the reach of an epidemic in social networks? We present Monte Carl...
The recurrent infectious diseases and their increasing impact on the society has promoted the study ...
Human mobility is an important factor in the propagation of infectious diseases. In particular, the ...
This thesis studies dynamics and control of epidemic spreading in complex networks especially scale-...
In real social networks, person-to-person interactions are known to be heterogeneous, which can affe...
The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we develop a self-organized method which...
The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we develop a self-organized method which...
The epidemic threshold of a social system is the ratio of infection and recovery rate above which a ...
We introduce a dynamic process of epidemic spreading into interdependent networks because, in realit...
Many real-world networks display a community structure. We study two random graph models that create...
In many real-world complex systems, individuals have many kinds of interactions among them, suggesti...
How do we best constrain social interactions to decrease transmission of communicable diseases? Indi...
This dissertation contributes to a methodology and a better understanding that can be used to study ...
The fight against epidemics/pandemics is one of man versus nature. Technological advances have not ...
<div><p>In this work, we study the evolution of the susceptible individuals during the spread of an ...
How does social distancing affect the reach of an epidemic in social networks? We present Monte Carl...