Academic Journal

The Role of Directionality, Heterogeneity, and Correlations in Epidemic Risk and Spread.

Bibliographic Details
Title: The Role of Directionality, Heterogeneity, and Correlations in Epidemic Risk and Spread.
Authors: Allard, Antoine, Moore, Cristopher, Scarpino, Samuel V., Althouse, Benjamin M., Hébert-Dufresne, Laurent
Source: SIAM Review; Jun2023, Vol. 65 Issue 2, p471-492, 22p
Abstract: Most models of epidemic spread, including many designed specifically for COVID-19, implicitly assume mass-action contact patterns and undirected contact networks, meaning that the individuals most likely to spread the disease are also the most at risk of contracting it from others. Here, we review results from the theory of random directed graphs which show that many important quantities, including the reproduction number and the epidemic size, depend sensitively on the joint distribution of in- and out-degrees ("risk" and "spread"), including their heterogeneity and the correlation between them. By considering joint distributions of various kinds, we elucidate why some types of heterogeneity cause a deviation from the standard Kermack--McKendrick analysis of SIR models, i.e., so-called mass-action models where contacts are homogeneous and random, and why some do not. We also show that some structured SIR models informed by realistic complex contact patterns among types of individuals (age or activity) are simply mixtures of Poisson processes and tend not to deviate significantly from the simplest mass-action model. Finally, we point out some possible policy implications of this directed structure, both for contact tracing strategy and for interventions designed to prevent superspreading events. In particular, directed graphs have a forward and a backward version of the classic "friendship paradox"--forward edges tend to lead to individuals with high risk, while backward edges lead to individuals with high spread--such that a combination of both forward and backward contact tracing is necessary to find superspreading events and prevent future cascades of infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Subject Terms: RANDOM graphs, SUPERSPREADING events, CONTACT tracing, INFECTIOUS disease transmission, DIRECTED graphs, EPIDEMICS, HETEROGENEITY
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ISSN: 00361445
DOI: 10.1137/20M1383811
Database: Complementary Index