Stability analysis of a vector-borne disease with variable human population
Publication:369858
DOI10.1155/2013/293293zbMath1271.92033OpenAlexW1987896490WikidataQ58915843 ScholiaQ58915843MaRDI QIDQ369858
Il Hyo Jung, Byul Nim Kim, Abid Ali Lashari, Young Il Seo, Muhammad Ozair
Publication date: 19 September 2013
Published in: Abstract and Applied Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/293293
Epidemiology (92D30) Qualitative investigation and simulation of ordinary differential equation models (34C60) Global stability of solutions to ordinary differential equations (34D23) Computational methods for problems pertaining to biology (92-08)
Related Items (4)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Vaccination strategies based on feedback control techniques for a general SEIR-epidemic model
- On the existence of equilibrium points, boundedness, oscillating behavior and positivity of a SVEIRS epidemic model under constant and impulsive vaccination
- Global dynamics of vector-borne diseases with horizontal transmission in host population
- Global stability of an epidemic model for vector-borne disease
- Dynamic behavior for a nonautonomous SIRS epidemic model with distributed delays
- Analysis of a simple vector-host epidemic model with direct transmission
- A model for dengue disease with variable human population
- Competitive exclusion in a vector-host model for the dengue fever
- A mathematical model for endemic malaria with variable human and mosquito populations
- Stability analysis and optimal control of a vector-borne disease with nonlinear incidence
- Dynamical behavior of a vector-host epidemic model with demographic structure
- An epidemic model of a vector-borne disease with direct transmission and time delay
- The Mathematics of Infectious Diseases
- Uniformly Persistent Systems
- A Geometric Approach to Global-Stability Problems
- Dynamical systems in population biology
This page was built for publication: Stability analysis of a vector-borne disease with variable human population