Stochastic dynamics of an SIS epidemic on networks
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2140016
DOI10.1007/s00285-022-01754-yzbMath1491.92113OpenAlexW4229024317WikidataQ113905365 ScholiaQ113905365MaRDI QIDQ2140016
Xiaojie Jing, Zhen Jin, Guirong Liu
Publication date: 20 May 2022
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00285-022-01754-y
Epidemiology (92D30) Systems biology, networks (92C42) Applications of continuous-time Markov processes on discrete state spaces (60J28)
Related Items
Stochastic modeling of SIS epidemics with logarithmic Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process and generalized nonlinear incidence ⋮ Strong convergence and extinction of positivity preserving explicit scheme for the stochastic SIS epidemic model
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The time to extinction for a stochastic SIS-household-epidemic model
- A stochastic SIS epidemic with demography: Initial stages and time to extinction
- The modeling of global epidemics: stochastic dynamics and predictability
- Stochastic epidemic models and their statistical analysis
- A stochastic SIR network epidemic model with preventive dropping of edges
- A new insight into isolating the high-degree nodes in network to control infectious diseases
- Dynamics of stochastic epidemics on heterogeneous networks
- Heterogeneous network epidemics: real-time growth, variance and extinction of infection
- A stochastic vector-borne epidemic model: quasi-stationarity and extinction
- The effect of clumped population structure on the variability of spreading dynamics
- A stochastic metapopulation model accounting for habitat dynamics
- The effect of demographic and environmental variability on disease outbreak for a dengue model with a seasonally varying vector population
- The Mathematics of Infectious Diseases
- Statistical mechanics of complex networks
- Quasi–stationary distributions in Markov population processes
- On the Time to Extinction in Recurrent Epidemics
- The Structure and Function of Complex Networks
- Solutions of ordinary differential equations as limits of pure jump markov processes
- Limit theorems for sequences of jump Markov processes approximating ordinary differential processes
- The principle of the diffusion of arbitrary constants