The Effect of Clumped Population Structure on the Variability of Spreading Dynamics
Overview
Affiliations
Processes that spread through local contact, including outbreaks of infectious diseases, are inherently noisy, and are frequently observed to be far noisier than predicted by standard stochastic models that assume homogeneous mixing. One way to reproduce the observed levels of noise is to introduce significant individual-level heterogeneity with respect to infection processes, such that some individuals are expected to generate more secondary cases than others. Here we consider a population where individuals can be naturally aggregated into clumps (subpopulations) with stronger interaction within clumps than between them. This clumped structure induces significant increases in the noisiness of a spreading process, such as the transmission of infection, despite complete homogeneity at the individual level. Given the ubiquity of such clumped aggregations (such as homes, schools and workplaces for humans or farms for livestock) we suggest this as a plausible explanation for noisiness of many epidemic time series.
Computation of random time-shift distributions for stochastic population models.
Morris D, Maclean J, Black A J Math Biol. 2024; 89(3):33.
PMID: 39133278 PMC: 11319395. DOI: 10.1007/s00285-024-02132-6.
Hilton J, Riley H, Pellis L, Aziza R, Brand S, Kombe I PLoS Comput Biol. 2022; 18(9):e1010390.
PMID: 36067212 PMC: 9481179. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010390.
Inference of epidemiological parameters from household stratified data.
Walker C, Walker J, Ross J, Black A PLoS One. 2017; 12(10):e0185910.
PMID: 29045456 PMC: 5646782. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185910.
Heterogeneous network epidemics: real-time growth, variance and extinction of infection.
Ball F, House T J Math Biol. 2017; 75(3):577-619.
PMID: 28097418 PMC: 5532454. DOI: 10.1007/s00285-016-1092-3.
The Effect of Disease-Induced Mortality on Structural Network Properties.
Gallos L, Fefferman N PLoS One. 2015; 10(8):e0136704.
PMID: 26313926 PMC: 4552173. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136704.