Effects of stochastic perturbation on the SIS epidemic system (Q504094): Difference between revisions
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In this paper, the authors extend the classical, deterministic SIS model to the following version with stochastic perturbations \[ \begin{aligned} dS(t)&=(\Lambda -\mu S(t)-\beta S(t)I(t)+\lambda I(t))dt+\sigma S(t)dB(t),\\ dI(t)&=(-(\mu +\lambda)I(t)+\beta S(t)I(t))dt+\sigma I(t)dB(t), \end{aligned} \] where \(B(t)\) is a Brownian motion defined on a complete probability space and \(\sigma\) is the variance of the number of potentially infectious contacts that a single infected individual makes with another individual in the small time interval \([t,t+dt)\). As it is customary for disease propagation models, conditions for the extinction and the persistence of the disease are considered. It is shown that if \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma =\frac{\beta \Lambda}{\mu (\mu +\lambda +\frac{1}{2}\sigma ^2)}<1\) \(I(t)\) tends to \(0\) exponentially almost surely and \(S(t)\) admits a unique stationary distribution. If \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma>1\) the disease is shown to be persistent and \((S(t),I(t))\) is observed to possess a unique stationary distribution, for which ergodic properties are established. Consequently, \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma\) plays the role of the basic reproduction number \(\mathcal{R}_0\) of the deterministic counterpart. Since \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma<\mathcal{R}_0\), the condition \(\mathcal{R}_0\leq 1\) is now only a sufficient condition for the extinction of the disease in the stochastic model. Also, the introduction of the stochastic noise is seen to modify the dynamics of the deterministic model. Specifically since \(\lim _{\sigma \to \infty}\mathcal{R}_\sigma =0\), very large perturbations cause the extinction of the disease with probability \(1\). Also since \(\lim _{\sigma \to 0}\mathcal{R}_\sigma =\mathcal{R}_0\), sufficiently small perturbations preserve the properties of \(\mathcal{R}_0\) in a stochastic sense. | |||
Property / review text: In this paper, the authors extend the classical, deterministic SIS model to the following version with stochastic perturbations \[ \begin{aligned} dS(t)&=(\Lambda -\mu S(t)-\beta S(t)I(t)+\lambda I(t))dt+\sigma S(t)dB(t),\\ dI(t)&=(-(\mu +\lambda)I(t)+\beta S(t)I(t))dt+\sigma I(t)dB(t), \end{aligned} \] where \(B(t)\) is a Brownian motion defined on a complete probability space and \(\sigma\) is the variance of the number of potentially infectious contacts that a single infected individual makes with another individual in the small time interval \([t,t+dt)\). As it is customary for disease propagation models, conditions for the extinction and the persistence of the disease are considered. It is shown that if \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma =\frac{\beta \Lambda}{\mu (\mu +\lambda +\frac{1}{2}\sigma ^2)}<1\) \(I(t)\) tends to \(0\) exponentially almost surely and \(S(t)\) admits a unique stationary distribution. If \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma>1\) the disease is shown to be persistent and \((S(t),I(t))\) is observed to possess a unique stationary distribution, for which ergodic properties are established. Consequently, \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma\) plays the role of the basic reproduction number \(\mathcal{R}_0\) of the deterministic counterpart. Since \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma<\mathcal{R}_0\), the condition \(\mathcal{R}_0\leq 1\) is now only a sufficient condition for the extinction of the disease in the stochastic model. Also, the introduction of the stochastic noise is seen to modify the dynamics of the deterministic model. Specifically since \(\lim _{\sigma \to \infty}\mathcal{R}_\sigma =0\), very large perturbations cause the extinction of the disease with probability \(1\). Also since \(\lim _{\sigma \to 0}\mathcal{R}_\sigma =\mathcal{R}_0\), sufficiently small perturbations preserve the properties of \(\mathcal{R}_0\) in a stochastic sense. / rank | |||
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Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Paul Georgescu / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 60H30 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 60H10 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 92D30 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 47D07 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number | |||
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6677736 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH Keywords | |||
SIS epidemic model | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: SIS epidemic model / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH Keywords | |||
stochastic perturbations | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: stochastic perturbations / rank | |||
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extinction | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: extinction / rank | |||
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persistence | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: persistence / rank | |||
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stationary distribution | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: stationary distribution / rank | |||
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Revision as of 01:05, 1 July 2023
scientific article
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English | Effects of stochastic perturbation on the SIS epidemic system |
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Effects of stochastic perturbation on the SIS epidemic system (English)
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25 January 2017
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In this paper, the authors extend the classical, deterministic SIS model to the following version with stochastic perturbations \[ \begin{aligned} dS(t)&=(\Lambda -\mu S(t)-\beta S(t)I(t)+\lambda I(t))dt+\sigma S(t)dB(t),\\ dI(t)&=(-(\mu +\lambda)I(t)+\beta S(t)I(t))dt+\sigma I(t)dB(t), \end{aligned} \] where \(B(t)\) is a Brownian motion defined on a complete probability space and \(\sigma\) is the variance of the number of potentially infectious contacts that a single infected individual makes with another individual in the small time interval \([t,t+dt)\). As it is customary for disease propagation models, conditions for the extinction and the persistence of the disease are considered. It is shown that if \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma =\frac{\beta \Lambda}{\mu (\mu +\lambda +\frac{1}{2}\sigma ^2)}<1\) \(I(t)\) tends to \(0\) exponentially almost surely and \(S(t)\) admits a unique stationary distribution. If \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma>1\) the disease is shown to be persistent and \((S(t),I(t))\) is observed to possess a unique stationary distribution, for which ergodic properties are established. Consequently, \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma\) plays the role of the basic reproduction number \(\mathcal{R}_0\) of the deterministic counterpart. Since \(\mathcal{R}_\sigma<\mathcal{R}_0\), the condition \(\mathcal{R}_0\leq 1\) is now only a sufficient condition for the extinction of the disease in the stochastic model. Also, the introduction of the stochastic noise is seen to modify the dynamics of the deterministic model. Specifically since \(\lim _{\sigma \to \infty}\mathcal{R}_\sigma =0\), very large perturbations cause the extinction of the disease with probability \(1\). Also since \(\lim _{\sigma \to 0}\mathcal{R}_\sigma =\mathcal{R}_0\), sufficiently small perturbations preserve the properties of \(\mathcal{R}_0\) in a stochastic sense.
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SIS epidemic model
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stochastic perturbations
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extinction
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persistence
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stationary distribution
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