To vaccinate or not to vaccinate: a comprehensive study of vaccination-subsidizing policies with multi-agent simulations and mean-field modeling
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1739250
DOI10.1016/j.jtbi.2019.02.013zbMath1411.92174OpenAlexW2916513651WikidataQ91935197 ScholiaQ91935197MaRDI QIDQ1739250
Kazuki Kuga, Marko Jusup, Jun Tanimoto
Publication date: 26 April 2019
Published in: Journal of Theoretical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2019.02.013
Related Items (23)
A game-theoretical analysis of poliomyelitis vaccination ⋮ Game-theoretical model of the voluntary use of insect repellents to prevent Zika fever ⋮ Epidemic dynamics for time-dependent transmission rate based on viral load dynamics: multi infection stage EBCM approach ⋮ Dynamics and simulations of a second order stochastically perturbed SEIQV epidemic model with saturated incidence rate ⋮ Influence of precaution and dynamic post-indemnity based insurance policy on controlling the propagation of epidemic security risks in networks ⋮ Optimal voluntary vaccination of adults and adolescents can help eradicate hepatitis B in China ⋮ The interplay of behaviors and attitudes in public goods game considering environmental investment ⋮ A game theoretic approach to discuss the positive secondary effect of vaccination scheme in an infinite and well-mixed population ⋮ Cost-efficiency analysis of voluntary vaccination against \(n\)-serovar diseases using antibody-dependent enhancement: a game approach ⋮ The role of advanced and late provisions in a co-evolutionary epidemic game model for assessing the social triple-dilemma aspect ⋮ Based on mathematical epidemiology and evolutionary game theory, which is more effective: quarantine or isolation policy? ⋮ Analysis of individual strategies for artificial and natural immunity with imperfectness and durability of protection ⋮ Modelling and analysing the coexistence of dual dilemmas in the proactive vaccination game and retroactive treatment game in epidemic viral dynamics ⋮ Interplay between cost and effectiveness in influenza vaccine uptake: a vaccination game approach ⋮ High endemic levels of typhoid fever in rural areas of Ghana may stem from optimal voluntary vaccination behaviour ⋮ An investigation on Monod-Haldane immune response based tumor-effector-interleukin-2 interactions with treatments ⋮ Free ticket, discount ticket or intermediate of the best of two worlds -- which subsidy policy is socially optimal to suppress the disease spreading? ⋮ Rumor spreading model with considering debunking behavior in emergencies ⋮ Is subsidizing vaccination with hub agent priority policy really meaningful to suppress disease spreading? ⋮ The impact of behavioral change on the epidemic under the benefit comparison ⋮ Modeling epidemic in metapopulation networks with heterogeneous diffusion rates ⋮ Discontinuous transitions of social distancing in the SIR model ⋮ A game-theoretic model of voluntary yellow fever vaccination to prevent urban outbreaks
Cites Work
- Risk assessment for infectious disease and its impact on voluntary vaccination behavior in social networks
- Effect of noise-perturbing intermediate defense measures in voluntary vaccination games
- Evolving public perceptions and stability in vaccine uptake
- Evolutionary vaccination dynamics with internal support mechanisms
- A new prediction model of infectious diseases with vaccination strategies based on evolutionary game theory
- Preferential imitation can invalidate targeted subsidy policies on seasonal-influenza diseases
- Realistic decision-making processes in a vaccination game
- Temporal network epidemiology
- Emergence of Scaling in Random Networks
- Fundamentals of Evolutionary Game Theory and its Applications
- Which is more effective for suppressing an infectious disease: imperfect vaccination or defense against contagion?
- Group interest versus self-interest in smallpox vaccination policy
This page was built for publication: To vaccinate or not to vaccinate: a comprehensive study of vaccination-subsidizing policies with multi-agent simulations and mean-field modeling