AbstractInfluenza infection natural history is often described as a progression through four successive stages: Susceptible–Exposed/Latent–Infectious–Removed (SEIR). The duration of each stage determines the average generation time, the time between infection of a case and infection of his/her infector.Recently, several authors have justified somewhat arbitrary choices in stage durations by how close the resulting generation time distribution was to viral excretion over time after infection. Taking this reasoning one step further, we propose that the viral excretion profile over time can be used directly to estimate the required parameters in an SEIR model. In our approach, the latency and infectious period distributions are estimated by mi...
Compartmental transmission models have become an invaluable tool to study the dynamics of infectious...
AbstractInformation about infectious disease outbreaks is often gathered indirectly, from doctor's r...
Characterization of the incubation time from infection to onset is important for understanding the n...
Influenza infection natural history is often described as a progression through four successive stag...
In susceptible–exposed–infectious–recovered (SEIR) epidemic models, with the exponentially distribut...
The incubation period of infectious diseases, the time from infection with a microorganism to onset ...
The basic reproduction number,<0, is of paramount importancein the study of infectious disease dynam...
Background. Time variations in transmission potential have rarely been examined with regard to pande...
Influenza A viruses have caused a number of global pandemics, with considerable mortality in humans....
AbstractInference on disease dynamics is typically performed using case reporting time series of sym...
Background: Time variations in transmission potential have rarely been examined with regard to pande...
A key parameter in epidemiological modeling which characterizes the spread of an infectious disease ...
A key parameter in epidemiological modeling which characterizes the spread of an infectious disease ...
Estimating the case fatality ratio (CFR) of a novel strain of influenza virus during the early stage...
The transmissibility of an infectious disease is usually quantified in terms of the reproduction nu...
Compartmental transmission models have become an invaluable tool to study the dynamics of infectious...
AbstractInformation about infectious disease outbreaks is often gathered indirectly, from doctor's r...
Characterization of the incubation time from infection to onset is important for understanding the n...
Influenza infection natural history is often described as a progression through four successive stag...
In susceptible–exposed–infectious–recovered (SEIR) epidemic models, with the exponentially distribut...
The incubation period of infectious diseases, the time from infection with a microorganism to onset ...
The basic reproduction number,<0, is of paramount importancein the study of infectious disease dynam...
Background. Time variations in transmission potential have rarely been examined with regard to pande...
Influenza A viruses have caused a number of global pandemics, with considerable mortality in humans....
AbstractInference on disease dynamics is typically performed using case reporting time series of sym...
Background: Time variations in transmission potential have rarely been examined with regard to pande...
A key parameter in epidemiological modeling which characterizes the spread of an infectious disease ...
A key parameter in epidemiological modeling which characterizes the spread of an infectious disease ...
Estimating the case fatality ratio (CFR) of a novel strain of influenza virus during the early stage...
The transmissibility of an infectious disease is usually quantified in terms of the reproduction nu...
Compartmental transmission models have become an invaluable tool to study the dynamics of infectious...
AbstractInformation about infectious disease outbreaks is often gathered indirectly, from doctor's r...
Characterization of the incubation time from infection to onset is important for understanding the n...