Impact of Indirect Contacts in Emerging Infectious Disease on Social Networks

March 21, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Pacific-Asia Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining

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Authors Md Shahzamal, Raja Jurdak, Bernard Mans, Ahmad El Shoghri, Frank De Hoog arXiv ID 1803.07968 Category cs.SI: Social & Info Networks Cross-listed physics.soc-ph, q-bio.PE Citations 5 Venue Pacific-Asia Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Interaction patterns among individuals play vital roles in spreading infectious diseases. Understanding these patterns and integrating their impact in modeling diffusion dynamics of infectious diseases are important for epidemiological studies. Current network-based diffusion models assume that diseases transmit through interactions where both infected and susceptible individuals are co-located at the same time. However, there are several infectious diseases that can transmit when a susceptible individual visits a location after an infected individual has left. Recently, we introduced a diffusion model called same place different time (SPDT) transmission to capture the indirect transmissions that happen when an infected individual leaves before a susceptible individual's arrival along with direct transmissions. In this paper, we demonstrate how these indirect transmission links significantly enhance the emergence of infectious diseases simulating airborne disease spreading on a synthetic social contact network. We denote individuals having indirect links but no direct links during their infectious periods as hidden spreaders. Our simulation shows that indirect links play similar roles of direct links and a single hidden spreader can cause large outbreak in the SPDT model which causes no infection in the current model based on direct link. Our work opens new direction in modeling infectious diseases.
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