Título
Efficiency of quarantine and self-protection processes in epidemic spreading control on scale-free networks
11627/468211627/4682
Autor
Esquivel Gómez, José de Jesús
Barajas Ramírez, Juan Gonzalo
Resumen
"One of the most effective mechanisms to contain the spread of an infectious disease through a
population is the implementation of quarantine policies. However, its efficiency is affected by
different aspects, for example, the structure of the underlining social network where highly
connected individuals are more likely to become infected; therefore, the speed of the transmission
of the decease is directly determined by the degree distribution of the network. Another aspect that
influences the effectiveness of the quarantine is the self-protection processes of the individuals in
the population, that is, they try to avoid contact with potentially infected individuals. In this paper,
we investigate the efficiency of quarantine and self-protection processes in preventing the spreading
of infectious diseases over complex networks with a power-law degree distribution
[PðkÞ k] for different values. We propose two alternative scale-free models that result in
power-law degree distributions above and below the exponent ¼ 3 associated with the conventional
Barabasi-Albert model. Our results show that the exponent determines the effectiveness of
these policies in controlling the spreading process. More precisely, we show that for the exponent
below three, the quarantine mechanism loses effectiveness. However, the efficiency is improved if
the quarantine is jointly implemented with a self-protection process driving the number of infected
individuals significantly lower."
Fecha de publicación
2018Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5001176Área de conocimiento
MATEMÁTICASEditor
American Institute of PhysicsPalabras clave
Complex networksModel