Epidemics with two levels of mixing

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 15:18, 31 January 2024 by Import240129110113 (talk | contribs) (Created automatically from import240129110113)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Publication:1355735


DOI10.1214/aoap/1034625252zbMath0909.92028MaRDI QIDQ1355735

Gianpaolo Scalia Tomba, Frank G. Ball, Denis Mollison

Publication date: 28 May 1997

Published in: The Annals of Applied Probability (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1214/aoap/1034625252


92D30: Epidemiology

05C80: Random graphs (graph-theoretic aspects)

60K35: Interacting random processes; statistical mechanics type models; percolation theory

60J80: Branching processes (Galton-Watson, birth-and-death, etc.)


Related Items

Bayesian Inference for Stochastic Epidemics in Populations with Random Social Structure, A Network‐based Analysis of the 1861 Hagelloch Measles Data, Statistical Inference in a Stochastic Epidemic SEIR Model with Control Intervention: Ebola as a Case Study, The Probability of Containment for Multitype Branching Process Models for Emerging Epidemics, Asymptotic Behaviour of Gossip Processes and Small-World Networks, Optimal vaccination schemes for epidemics among a population of households, with application to variola minor in Brazil, Exact Bayesian Inference and Model Selection for Stochastic Models of Epidemics Among a Community of Households, Stochastic Epidemic Models in Structured Populations Featuring Dynamic Vaccination and Isolation, An epidemic model with infector-dependent severity, Coupling of Two SIR Epidemic Models with Variable Susceptibilities and Infectivities, Bayesian inference for epidemics with two levels of mixing, Nonstationarity and randomization in the Reed-Frost epidemic model, Bayesian Inference for Stochastic Multitype Epidemics in Structured Populations Via Random Graphs, Deterministic epidemic models on contact networks: correlations and unbiological terms, Compound Poisson limits for household epidemics, Exact Bayesian inference via data augmentation, Random migration processes between two stochastic epidemic centers, Reproduction numbers for epidemic models with households and other social structures. II: comparisons and implications for vaccination, Moment equations and dynamics of a household SIS epidemiological model, Stochastic SIR epidemics in a population with households and schools, Choice of antiviral allocation scheme for pandemic influenza depends on strain transmissibility, delivery delay and stockpile size, First passage percolation on the Newman-Watts small world model, Optimal two-phase vaccine allocation to geographically different regions under uncertainty, Solvability of implicit final size equations for SIR epidemic models, Modelling under-reporting in epidemics, Multigeneration reproduction ratios and the effects of clustered unvaccinated individuals on epidemic outbreak, Reproduction numbers for epidemic models with households and other social structures. I: Definition and calculation of \(R_{0}\), Modelling disease spread through random and regular contacts in clustered populations, The failure of \(R_{0}\), Epidemic growth rate and household reproduction number in communities of households, schools and workplaces, Exact epidemic models on graphs using graph-automorphism driven lumping, Efficient likelihood-free Bayesian computation for household epidemics, Reproductive numbers, epidemic spread and control in a community of households, Eliminating infectious diseases of livestock: a metapopulation model of infection control, Multitype randomized Reed-Frost epidemics and epidemics upon random graphs, Estimating protective vaccine efficacy from large trials with recruitment, On analytical approaches to epidemics on networks, Estimating the within-household infection rate in emerging SIR epidemics among a community of households, Deterministic epidemic models with explicit household structure, Finding optimal vaccination strategies under parameter uncertainty using stochastic program\-ming, The relationship between real-time and discrete-generation models of epidemic spread, Control of emerging infectious diseases using responsive imperfect vaccination and isolation, Analysis of a stochastic SIR epidemic on a random network incorporating household structure, Stochastic epidemic models: a survey, Reaction-diffusion processes and epidemic metapopulation models in complex networks, Limit theorems for a random graph epidemic model, The effect of random vaccine response on the vaccination coverage required to prevent epidemics, The deterministic limit of infectious disease models with dynamic partners, The effect of community structure on the immunity coverage required to prevent epidemics, Optimal vaccination policies for stochastic epidemics among a population of households, Stochastic and deterministic models for SIS epidemics among a population partitioned into households, Stochastic effects on endemic infection levels of disseminating versus local contacts, A general model for stochastic SIR epidemics with two levels of mixing, A tutorial introduction to Bayesian inference for stochastic epidemic models using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, Information flow in generalized hierarchical networks, SIS epidemics with household structure: the self-consistent field method, Poisson approximations for epidemics with two levels of mixing., Inhomogeneous epidemics on weighted networks, A network with tunable clustering, degree correlation and degree distribution, and an epidemic thereon, Conflicts of interest during contact investigations: a game-theoretic analysis, Invasion threshold in structured populations with recurrent mobility patterns, Analysis of household data on influenza epidemic with Bayesian hierarchical model, Algebraic moment closure for population dynamics on discrete structures, Variability in a community-structured SIS epidemiological model, Thresholds for virus spread on networks, Stochastic comparisons of mixtures of parametric families in stochastic epidemics, Relations between deterministic and stochastic thresholds for disease extinction in continuous- and discrete-time infectious disease models, Epidemics on random intersection graphs, Endemic persistence or disease extinction: The effect of separation into sub-communities, Network epidemic models with two levels of mixing, Control of transmission with two types of infection, Assessing the impact of intervention delays on stochastic epidemics, Applications of the variance of final outbreak size for disease spreading in networks, Stochastic multitype epidemics in a community of households: estimation and form of optimal vaccination schemes, The great circle epidemic model., Epidemic modelling: aspects where stochasticity matters, Small worlds, On expected durations of birth–death processes, with applications to branching processes and SIS epidemics, SIR epidemics on a scale-free spatial nested modular network, Stochastic Epidemic Modeling, Two Critical Issues in Quantitative Modeling of Communicable Diseases: Inference of Unobservables and Dependent Happening, Predecessors and Successors in Random Mappings with Exchangeable In-Degrees, Estimating the Transmission Dynamics of Streptococcus pneumoniae from Strain Prevalence Data, Inference for Epidemics with Three Levels of Mixing: Methodology and Application to a Measles Outbreak, Total Progeny of Crump-Mode-Jagers Branching Processes: An Application to Vaccination in Epidemic Modelling, Inference for Emerging Epidemics Among a Community of Households, A household SIR epidemic model incorporating time of day effects, Stochastic and deterministic analysis of SIS household epidemics, Contact network epidemiology: Bond percolation applied to infectious disease prediction and control, Infections with Varying Contact Rates: Application to Varicella, Epidemic Outbreaks in Networks with Equitable or Almost-Equitable Partitions, The SIS Great Circle Epidemic Model, Epidemics on Random Graphs with Tunable Clustering, From damage models to SIR epidemics and cascading failures, Threshold behaviour and final outcome of an epidemic on a random network with household structure