The Annals of Applied Probability

Individual versus cluster recoveries within a spatially structured population

L. Belhadji and N. Lanchier

Source: Ann. Appl. Probab. Volume 16, Number 1 (2006), 403-422.

Abstract

Stochastic modeling of disease dynamics has had a long tradition. Among the first epidemic models including a spatial structure in the form of local interactions is the contact process. In this article we investigate two extensions of the contact process describing the course of a single disease within a spatially structured human population distributed in social clusters. That is, each site of the d-dimensional integer lattice is occupied by a cluster of individuals; each individual can be healthy or infected. The evolution of the disease depends on three parameters, namely the outside infection rate which models the interactions between the clusters, the within infection rate which takes into account the repeated contacts between individuals in the same cluster, and the size of each social cluster. For the first model, we assume cluster recoveries, while individual recoveries are assumed for the second one. The aim is to investigate the existence of nontrivial stationary distributions for both processes depending on the value of each of the three parameters. Our results show that the probability of an epidemic strongly depends on the recovery mechanism.

Primary Subjects: 60K35, 82C22
Secondary Subjects: 92D30

Full-text: Open access

Links and Identifiers

Permanent link to this document: http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.aoap/1141654292
Digital Object Identifier: doi:10.1214/105051605000000764
Mathematical Reviews number (MathSciNet): MR2209347
Zentralblatt MATH identifier: 05036886

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