Spatially structured superinfection and the evolution of disease virulence
DOI10.1016/J.TPB.2005.12.004zbMATH Open1120.92035OpenAlexW2130588533WikidataQ57001149 ScholiaQ57001149MaRDI QIDQ2500407FDOQ2500407
Authors: Thomas Caraco, Stephan Glavanakov, Shengua Li, William Maniatty, Boleslaw Szymanski
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
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Cites Work
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- Pathogen invasion and host extinction in lattice structured populations
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Cited In (13)
- Within-host dynamics and random duration of pathogen infection: implications for between-host transmission
- Repulsion of Superinfecting Virions: A Mechanism for Rapid Virus Spread
- Invasive advance of an advantageous mutation: nucleation theory
- Preemptive spatial competition under a reproduction-mortality constraint
- Superinfections can induce evolutionarily stable coexistence of pathogens
- Coevolutionary cycling of host sociality and pathogen virulence in contact networks
- Pathogen transmission at stage-structured infectious patches: killers and vaccinators
- Adaptive Dynamics of Infectious Diseases
- The curse of the pharaoh in space: free-living infectious stages and the evolution of virulence in spatially explicit populations
- Virulence and transmission modes in metapopulations: when group selection increases virulence
- Free-living pathogens: life-history constraints and strain competition
- Superinfection behaviors on scale-free networks with competing strains
- Dynamics and genealogy of strains in spatially extended host-pathogen models
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