论文标题
使用相互作用驱动的模型探索节省活动时间扩张对空中传播过程和时间网络的动态相互作用的影响
Exploring the effects of activity-preserving time dilation on the dynamic interplay of airborne contagion processes and temporal networks using an interaction-driven model
论文作者
论文摘要
接触的时间顺序和动态对于理解传染病的传播至关重要。我们在接触网络上引入了以互动为导向的机载疾病模型。我们演示了通过历史维护历史的随机时间网络和现实世界触点,该模型实例化了COVID-19的相互作用驱动模型。我们使用它来评估时间,时空和空间社会距离政策。我们发现,在疾病的早期,空间距离政策主要是有益的。 然后,我们继续评估时间距离,即保持活动潜力的时间表扩张。我们扩展模型以考虑暴露于病毒载荷,这与会议的持续时间相关。使用现实生活接触数据,我们证明了时间轴扩张对总体感染率的有益影响。 我们的结果表明,鉴于相同的传播水平,在时间轴扩张条件下,疾病的感染率和总体患病率降低了。我们进一步表明,缓慢的病原体(即需要更长的暴露才能感染)以与高度活跃社区的快速分散率相同的速度扩散。这是令人惊讶的,因为较慢的病原体遵循包含更长会议的路径,而更快的病原体可能会遵循包括较短会议的路径,这些路径更常见。我们的结果表明,社区的时间动态对疾病的传播具有比扩散过程的特征更重要的影响。
Contacts' temporal ordering and dynamics are crucial for understanding the transmission of infectious diseases. We introduce an interaction-driven model of an airborne disease over contact networks. We demonstrate our interaction-driven contagion model, instantiated for COVID-19, over history-maintaining random temporal networks and real-world contacts. We use it to evaluate temporal, spatiotemporal, and spatial social distancing policies. We find that a spatial distancing policy is mainly beneficial at the early stages of a disease. We then continue to evaluate temporal social distancing, that is, timeline dilation that maintains the activity potential. We expand our model to consider the exposure to viral load, which we correlate with meetings' duration. Using real-life contact data, we demonstrate the beneficial effect of timeline dilation on overall infection rates. Our results demonstrate that given the same transmission level, there is a decrease in the disease's infection rate and overall prevalence under timeline dilation conditions. We further show that slow-spreading pathogens (i.e., require more prolonged exposure to infect) spread roughly at the same rate as fast-spreading ones in highly active communities. This is surprising since slower pathogens follow paths that include longer meetings, while faster pathogens can potentially follow paths that include shorter meetings, which are more common. Our results demonstrate that the temporal dynamics of a community have a more significant effect on the spread of the disease than the characteristics of the spreading processes.