Epidemic modeling: Diffusion approximation vs. stochastic differential equations allowing reflection
DOI10.1142/S1793524521500364zbMath1475.92158OpenAlexW3134278186WikidataQ115244586 ScholiaQ115244586MaRDI QIDQ5164571
Roger Pettersson, Zarife Zararsız, Mohamed El Fatini, Mohammed Louriki
Publication date: 12 November 2021
Published in: International Journal of Biomathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1142/s1793524521500364
stochastic differential equationsdiffusion approximationsepidemic modelsspeed measurereflecting boundarieskilled processesscale measure
Epidemiology (92D30) Stochastic ordinary differential equations (aspects of stochastic analysis) (60H10) Applications of branching processes (60J85)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Stationary distribution of stochastic population systems under regime switching
- Dynamics of a multigroup SIR epidemic model with stochastic perturbation
- Asymptotic behavior of global positive solution to a stochastic SIR model
- A comparison between random and stochastic modeling for a SIR model
- Strong approximation theorems for density dependent Markov chains
- Analysis of a stochastic distributed delay epidemic model with relapse and Gamma distribution kernel
- Stationary distribution and threshold dynamics of a stochastic SIRS model with a general incidence
- The asymptotic behavior of a stochastic vaccination model with backward bifurcation
- Stochastic population dynamics under regime switching
- Simulation and inference for stochastic differential equations. With R examples.
- Stochastic Population Processes
- A Stochastic Differential Equation SIS Epidemic Model
- Ergodicity of diffusion and temporal uniformity of diffusion approximation
- Solutions of ordinary differential equations as limits of pure jump markov processes
- Limit theorems for sequences of jump Markov processes approximating ordinary differential processes
This page was built for publication: Epidemic modeling: Diffusion approximation vs. stochastic differential equations allowing reflection