Pages that link to "Item:Q4785319"
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The following pages link to The Epidemiology of HIV Infection: Variable Incubation Plus Infectious Periods and Heterogeneity in Sexual Activity (Q4785319):
Displaying 19 items.
- Incubation periods under various anti-retroviral therapies in homogeneous mixing and age-structured dynamical models: a theoretical approach (Q491367) (← links)
- Modeling AIDS as a function of other sexually transmitted disease (Q751560) (← links)
- Epidemiological models with age structure, proportionate mixing, and cross-immunity (Q752601) (← links)
- On the role of long incubation periods in the dynamics of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). I: Single population models (Q752603) (← links)
- Improving estimates of the basic reproductive ratio: Using both the mean and the dispersal of transition times (Q851428) (← links)
- A generalized chain binomial model with application to HIV infection (Q915696) (← links)
- Analysis of a risk-based model for the growth of AIDS infection (Q1183941) (← links)
- Modelling the effects of AIDS on gonorrhea epidemiology (Q1206161) (← links)
- AIDS: Exponential vs. polynomial growth models (Q1262685) (← links)
- Modeling the interaction between AIDS and tuberculosis (Q1310198) (← links)
- Literature survey: The current state of knowledge in modeling the AIDS epidemic (Q1324284) (← links)
- A linked risk group model for investigating the spread of HIV (Q1324722) (← links)
- A transmission model for HIV with application to the Australian epidemic (Q1325019) (← links)
- The HIV/AIDS epidemics among drug injectors: A study of contact structure through a mathematical model (Q1360034) (← links)
- Assessment of sexual mixing patterns (Q1802227) (← links)
- Effects of heterogeneity on the spread of HIV/AIDS among intravenous drug users in shooting galleries (Q1817519) (← links)
- The impact of sexual mixing patterns on the spread of AIDS (Q1901150) (← links)
- A CA-based epidemic model for HIV/AIDS transmission with heterogeneity (Q2271836) (← links)
- A combination of differential equations and convolution in understanding the spread of an epidemic (Q2574850) (← links)