Estimating the transmission potential of supercritical processes based on the final size distribution of minor outbreaks
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1786999
DOI10.1016/j.jtbi.2011.10.039zbMath1397.92666OpenAlexW2094740420WikidataQ35645480 ScholiaQ35645480MaRDI QIDQ1786999
Ping Yan, Candace K. Sleeman, Charles J. Mode, Hiroshi Nishiura
Publication date: 26 September 2018
Published in: Journal of Theoretical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3249525
Epidemiology (92D30) Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Applications of branching processes (60J85)
Related Items (6)
Escaping stochastic extinction of mutant virus: temporal pattern of emergence of drug resistance within a host ⋮ Temporal pattern of the emergence of a mutant virus escaping cross-immunity and stochastic extinction within a host ⋮ An exact and implementable computation of the final outbreak size distribution under Erlang distributed infectious period ⋮ Estimating the basic reproduction number from surveillance data on past epidemics ⋮ Sub- or supercritical transmissibilities in a finite disease outbreak: symmetry in outbreak properties of a disease conditioned on extinction ⋮ modelSSE
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The failure of \(R_{0}\)
- On analytical approaches to epidemics on networks
- Using epidemic prevalence data to jointly estimate reproduction and removal
- Stochastic epidemic models and their statistical analysis
- Estimation of the incubation period of influenza A (H1N1-2009) among imported cases: addressing censoring using outbreak data at the origin of importation
- The effect of superspreading on epidemic outbreak size distributions
- Time variations in the generation time of an infectious disease: implications for sampling to appropriately quantify transmission potential
- Estimating the reproduction number from the initial phase of the Spanish flu pandemic waves in Geneva, Switzerland
- Epidemic modelling: aspects where stochasticity matters
- Estimation of the Basic Reproduction Number for Infectious Diseases from Age-Stratified Serological Survey Data
- Distribution Theory, Stochastic Processes and Infectious Disease Modelling
- On the spread of a disease with gamma distributed latent and infectious periods
- On parametric estimation for mortal branching processes
- The final size and severity of a generalised stochastic multitype epidemic model
- The distribution of general final state random variables for stochastic epidemic models
- Branching process models for surveillance of infectious diseases controlled by mass vaccination
This page was built for publication: Estimating the transmission potential of supercritical processes based on the final size distribution of minor outbreaks