Coupling of Two SIR Epidemic Models with Variable Susceptibilities and Infectivities
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5443700
DOI10.1239/jap/1175267162zbMath1130.92047OpenAlexW2042465388MaRDI QIDQ5443700
Publication date: 22 February 2008
Published in: Journal of Applied Probability (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1239/jap/1175267162
Epidemiology (92D30) Central limit and other weak theorems (60F05) Applications of graph theory (05C90) Random graphs (graph-theoretic aspects) (05C80) Branching processes (Galton-Watson, birth-and-death, etc.) (60J80)
Related Items (7)
On the number of recovered individuals in the \(SIS\) and \(SIR\) stochastic epidemic models ⋮ Effective degree household network disease model ⋮ Bounding the Size and Probability of Epidemics on Networks ⋮ Effective degree network disease models ⋮ Network epidemic models with two levels of mixing ⋮ SIR dynamics in random networks with communities ⋮ An epidemic model with short-lived mixing groups
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Generating simple random graphs with prescribed degree distribution
- Multitype randomized Reed-Frost epidemics and epidemics upon random graphs
- Limit theorems for a random graph epidemic model
- The effect of random vaccine response on the vaccination coverage required to prevent epidemics
- Epidemics with two levels of mixing
- Extreme value distributions for random coupon collector and birthday problems
- Branching approximation for the collective epidemic model
- The great circle epidemic model.
- Stochastic multi-type SIR epidemics among a population partitioned into households
- On the asymptotic distribution of the size of a stochastic epidemic
- Deterministic and stochastic epidemics with several kinds of susceptibles
- Asymptotic final-size distribution for some chain-binomial processes
- The final size and severity of a generalised stochastic multitype epidemic model
- SIR epidemics on a Bernoulli random graph
- The final outcome of an epidemic model with several different types of infective in a large population
- An epidemic model with exposure-dependent severities
- Nonstationarity and randomization in the Reed-Frost epidemic model
This page was built for publication: Coupling of Two SIR Epidemic Models with Variable Susceptibilities and Infectivities