March 2016 On expected durations of birth-death processes, with applications to branching processes and SIS epidemics
Frank Ball, Tom Britton, Peter Neal
Author Affiliations +
J. Appl. Probab. 53(1): 203-215 (March 2016).

Abstract

We study continuous-time birth-death type processes, where individuals have independent and identically distributed lifetimes, according to a random variable Q, with E[Q] = 1, and where the birth rate if the population is currently in state (has size) n is α(n). We focus on two important examples, namely α(n) = λ n being a branching process, and α(n) = λn(N - n) / N which corresponds to an SIS (susceptible → infective → susceptible) epidemic model in a homogeneously mixing community of fixed size N. The processes are assumed to start with a single individual, i.e. in state 1. Let T, An, C, and S denote the (random) time to extinction, the total time spent in state n, the total number of individuals ever alive, and the sum of the lifetimes of all individuals in the birth-death process, respectively. We give expressions for the expectation of all these quantities and show that these expectations are insensitive to the distribution of Q. We also derive an asymptotic expression for the expected time to extinction of the SIS epidemic, but now starting at the endemic state, which is not independent of the distribution of Q. The results are also applied to the household SIS epidemic, showing that, in contrast to the household SIR (susceptible → infective → recovered) epidemic, its threshold parameter R* is insensitive to the distribution of Q.

Citation

Download Citation

Frank Ball. Tom Britton. Peter Neal. "On expected durations of birth-death processes, with applications to branching processes and SIS epidemics." J. Appl. Probab. 53 (1) 203 - 215, March 2016.

Information

Published: March 2016
First available in Project Euclid: 8 March 2016

zbMATH: 1337.60207
MathSciNet: MR3471957

Subjects:
Primary: 60J80
Secondary: 60G10 , 92D30

Keywords: birth-death process , branching processes , insensitivity results , SIS epidemics

Rights: Copyright © 2016 Applied Probability Trust

JOURNAL ARTICLE
13 PAGES

This article is only available to subscribers.
It is not available for individual sale.
+ SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

Vol.53 • No. 1 • March 2016
Back to Top