Long-range correlations improve understanding of the influence of network structure on contact dynamics
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Theoretical Population Biology. 2008, vol. 73, n° 3, p. 383-394
Elsevier
Résumé en anglais
Models of infectious diseases are characterized by a phase transition between extinction and persistence. A challenge in contemporary epidemiology is to understand how the geometry of a host’s interaction network influences ...Lire la suite >
Models of infectious diseases are characterized by a phase transition between extinction and persistence. A challenge in contemporary epidemiology is to understand how the geometry of a host’s interaction network influences disease dynamics close to the critical point of such a transition. Here we address this challenge with the help of moment closures. Traditional moment closures, however, do not provide satisfactory predictions close to such critical points. We therefore introduce a new method for incorporating longer-range correlations into existing closures. Our method is technically simple, remains computationally tractable and significantly improves the approximation’s performance. Our extended closures thus provide an innovative tool for quantifying the influence of interaction networks on spatially or socially structured disease dynamics. In particular, we examine the effects of a network’s clustering coefficient, as well as of new geometrical measures, such as a network’s square clustering coefficients. We compare the relative performance of different closures from the literature, with or without our long-range extension. In this way, we demonstrate that the normalized version of the Bethe approximation–extended to incorporate long-range correlations according to our method–is an especially good candidate for studying influences of network structure. Our numerical results highlight the importance of the clustering coefficient and the square clustering coefficient for predicting disease dynamics at low and intermediate values of transmission rate, and demonstrate the significance of path redundancy for disease persistence.< Réduire
Mots clés
PHASE TRANSITION
STRUCTURE RÉTICULAIRE
PHASE DE TRANSITION
MODÈLE DE PROPAGATION
Mots clés en anglais
CONTACT PROCESS
INTERACTION-NETWORK STRUCTURE
LONG-RANGE CORRELATION
MOMENT CLOSURE
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche