Game-Theoretic Vaccination Against Networked SIS Epidemics and Impacts of Human Decision-Making
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5211941
DOI10.1109/TCNS.2019.2897904OpenAlexW2889507725WikidataQ128493514 ScholiaQ128493514MaRDI QIDQ5211941
Ashish R. Hota, Shreyas Sundaram
Publication date: 28 January 2020
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Control of Network Systems (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.08750
Related Items (8)
Game-theoretic frameworks for epidemic spreading and human decision-making: a review ⋮ Dynamic games of social distancing during an epidemic: analysis of asymmetric solutions ⋮ Nash social distancing games with equity constraints: how inequality aversion affects the spread of epidemics ⋮ Analyzing a class of stochastic SIRS models under imperfect vaccination ⋮ Learning to mitigate epidemic risks: a dynamic population game approach ⋮ Effects of asymptomatic infection and self-initiated awareness on the coupled disease-awareness dynamics in multiplex networks ⋮ Analysis of epidemic vaccination strategies on heterogeneous networks: based on SEIRV model and evolutionary game ⋮ Impacts of Game-Theoretic Activation on Epidemic Spread over Dynamical Networks
This page was built for publication: Game-Theoretic Vaccination Against Networked SIS Epidemics and Impacts of Human Decision-Making