Is subsidizing vaccination with hub agent priority policy really meaningful to suppress disease spreading?
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Publication:2288456
DOI10.1016/j.jtbi.2019.110059zbMath1429.92100OpenAlexW2983565287WikidataQ91070002 ScholiaQ91070002MaRDI QIDQ2288456
Publication date: 20 January 2020
Published in: Journal of Theoretical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2019.110059
Games involving graphs (91A43) Applications of game theory (91A80) Medical epidemiology (92C60) Evolutionary games (91A22)
Related Items (7)
Modeling the competitive diffusions of rumor and knowledge and the impacts on epidemic spreading ⋮ Influence of precaution and dynamic post-indemnity based insurance policy on controlling the propagation of epidemic security risks in networks ⋮ Markov-based solution for information diffusion on adaptive social networks ⋮ The interplay of behaviors and attitudes in public goods game considering environmental investment ⋮ Cost-efficiency analysis of voluntary vaccination against \(n\)-serovar diseases using antibody-dependent enhancement: a game approach ⋮ Analysis of individual strategies for artificial and natural immunity with imperfectness and durability of protection ⋮ Free ticket, discount ticket or intermediate of the best of two worlds -- which subsidy policy is socially optimal to suppress the disease spreading?
Cites Work
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- Preferential imitation can invalidate targeted subsidy policies on seasonal-influenza diseases
- To vaccinate or not to vaccinate: a comprehensive study of vaccination-subsidizing policies with multi-agent simulations and mean-field modeling
- Realistic decision-making processes in a vaccination game
- Emergence of Scaling in Random Networks
- Impact of imperfect vaccination and defense against contagion on vaccination behavior in complex networks
- Fundamentals of Evolutionary Game Theory and its Applications
- Evolutionary Games with Sociophysics
- Which is more effective for suppressing an infectious disease: imperfect vaccination or defense against contagion?
- Group interest versus self-interest in smallpox vaccination policy
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