Spatially structured superinfection and the evolution of disease virulence
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2500407
DOI10.1016/J.TPB.2005.12.004zbMath1120.92035OpenAlexW2130588533WikidataQ57001149 ScholiaQ57001149MaRDI QIDQ2500407
Shengua Li, Stephan Glavanakov, Thomas Caraco, Boleslaw K. Szymanski, William Maniatty
Publication date: 23 August 2006
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpb.2005.12.004
Epidemiology (92D30) Interacting random processes; statistical mechanics type models; percolation theory (60K35)
Related Items (6)
Preemptive spatial competition under a reproduction-mortality constraint ⋮ Coevolutionary cycling of host sociality and pathogen virulence in contact networks ⋮ Within-host dynamics and random duration of pathogen infection: implications for between-host transmission ⋮ Invasive advance of an advantageous mutation: nucleation theory ⋮ Pathogen transmission at stage-structured infectious patches: killers and vaccinators ⋮ Free-living pathogens: life-history constraints and strain competition
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A competitive exclusion principle for pathogen virulence
- Spatial dynamics of invasion: the geometry of introduced species
- The evolution of virulence in vector-borne and directly transmitted parasites
- Pathogen invasion and host extinction in lattice structured populations
- Progression age enhanced backward bifurcation in an epidemic model with super-infection
- Host spatial heterogeneity and the spread of vector-borne infection.
- On the evolutionary coexistence of parasite strains
- Population dispersion and equilibrium infection frequency in a spatial epidemic
- Coinfection and superinfection in RNA virus populations: A selection--mutation model
- Trade-offs and the evolution of virulence of microparasites: do details matter?
- Evolutionary games and computer simulations.
- Adaptive Dynamics of Infectious Diseases
This page was built for publication: Spatially structured superinfection and the evolution of disease virulence