A stochastic model for disease transmission in a managed herd, motivated by \textit{Neospora caninum} amongst dairy cattle
DOI10.1016/S0025-5564(01)00047-5zbMATH Open1006.92027OpenAlexW1997660690WikidataQ44989819 ScholiaQ44989819MaRDI QIDQ5951682FDOQ5951682
Publication date: 6 February 2003
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0025-5564(01)00047-5
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Ornstein-Uhlenbeck processesstationary distributiondiffusion approximationsdairy cattledensity-dependent processesconstrained herd sizeneospora caninum
Epidemiology (92D30) Applications of Brownian motions and diffusion theory (population genetics, absorption problems, etc.) (60J70)
Cites Work
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- On a model for interference between searching insect parasites
- On the Time to Extinction in Recurrent Epidemics
- Solutions of ordinary differential equations as limits of pure jump markov processes
- Limit theorems for sequences of jump Markov processes approximating ordinary differential processes
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- An Efficient Procedure for Computing Quasi-Stationary Distributions of Markov Chains by Sparse Transition Structure
Cited In (7)
- Markov chain approach to analyze the dynamics of pathogen fecal shedding -- example of \textit{Listeria monocytogenes} shedding in a herd of dairy cattle
- An eco‐epidemic model for infectious keratoconjunctivitis caused by Mycoplasma conjunctivae in domestic and wild herbivores, with possible vaccination strategies
- Dynamics of infection with multiple transmission mechanisms in unmanaged/managed animal populations
- Disease Resistance Modelled as First-Passage Times of Genetically Dependent Stochastic Processes
- Stochastic dynamics of immunity in small populations: a general framework
- A semi-stochastic model of the transmission of \textit{Escherichia coli} O157 in a typical UK dairy herd: dynamics, sensitivity analysis and intervention/prevention strategies
- The transmission dynamics of the aetiological agent of scrapie in a sheep flock
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