A stochastic vector-borne epidemic model: quasi-stationarity and extinction
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2408699
DOI10.1016/J.MBS.2017.05.004zbMath1378.92067OpenAlexW2613120762WikidataQ42027415 ScholiaQ42027415MaRDI QIDQ2408699
Publication date: 13 October 2017
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2017.05.004
Related Items (14)
When Do Epidemics End? Scientific Insights from Mathematical Modelling Studies ⋮ Stationary distribution and extinction of a stochastic dengue epidemic model ⋮ Stochastic dynamics of an SIS epidemic on networks ⋮ The Euler characteristic as a topological marker for outbreaks in vector-borne disease ⋮ Impact of incubation delay and stochastic perturbation on Dengue fever virus transmission model ⋮ A stochastic switched SIRS epidemic model with nonlinear incidence and vaccination: Stationary distribution and extinction ⋮ Extinction in host-vector infection models and the role of heterogeneity ⋮ Threshold Parameters of Stochastic SIR and SIRS Epidemic Models with Delay and Nonlinear Incidence ⋮ Global dynamics of deterministic and stochastic epidemic systems with nonmonotone incidence rate ⋮ Approximation methods for analyzing multiscale stochastic vector-borne epidemic models ⋮ Analysis of a stochastic HIV-1 infection model with degenerate diffusion ⋮ Analysis of an epidemiological model driven by multiple noises: ergodicity and convergence rate ⋮ ANALYSIS OF A STOCHASTIC RECOVERY-RELAPSE EPIDEMIC MODEL WITH PERIODIC PARAMETERS AND MEDIA COVERAGE ⋮ Stochastic dynamics of the transmission of Dengue fever virus between mosquitoes and humans
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Malaria drug resistance: the impact of human movement and spatial heterogeneity
- On the quasi-stationary distribution of the Ross malaria model
- A stochastic model for the transmission of bilharzia
- Stability analysis of a schistosomiasis model with delays
- A mathematical analysis of the effects of control strategies on the transmission dynamics of malaria
- The role of heterogeneity on the invasion probability of mosquito-borne diseases in multi-host models
- On a model for interference between searching insect parasites
- On the Time to Extinction in Recurrent Epidemics
- On quasi-stationary distributions in absorbing continuous-time finite Markov chains
- Numerical methods in the context of compartmental models in epidemiology
- Stochastic epidemics in dynamic populations: Quasi-stationarity and extinction
This page was built for publication: A stochastic vector-borne epidemic model: quasi-stationarity and extinction