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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Examples  



1.1  Assortative mixing  





1.2  Homogenous mixing  





1.3  Asymmetric mixing  







2 Social contact hypothesis  





3 See also  





4 References  














WAIFW matrix






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Ininfectious disease modelling, a who acquires infection from whom (WAIFW) matrix is a matrix that describes the rate of transmission of infection between different groups in a population, such as people of different ages.[1] Used with an SIR model, the entries of the WAIFW matrix can be used to calculate the basic reproduction number using the next generation operator approach.[2]

Examples

[edit]

The WAIFW matrix for two groups is expressed as where is the transmission coefficient from an infected member of group and a susceptible member of group . Usually specific mixing patterns are assumed.[citation needed]

Assortative mixing

[edit]

Assortative mixing occurs when those with certain characteristics are more likely to mix with others with whom they share those characteristics. It could be given by [2] or the general WAIFW matrix so long as . Disassortative mixing is instead when .

Homogenous mixing

[edit]

Homogenous mixing, which is also dubbed random mixing, is given by .[3] Transmission is assumed equally likely regardless of group characteristics when a homogenous mixing WAIFW matrix is used. Whereas for heterogenous mixing, transmission rates depend on group characteristics.

Asymmetric mixing

[edit]

It need not be the case that . Examples of asymmetric WAIFW matrices are[4]

Social contact hypothesis

[edit]

The social contact hypothesis was proposed by Jacco Wallinga [nl], Peter Teunis, and Mirjam Kretzschmar in 2006. The hypothesis states that transmission rates are proportional to contact rates, and allows for social contact data to be used in place of WAIFW matrices.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Keeling, Matt J.; Rohani, Pejman (2011). Modeling Infectious Diseases in Humans and Animals. Princeton University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-4008-4103-5.
  • ^ a b Hens, Niel; Shkedy, Ziv; Aerts, Marc; Faes, Christel; Van Damme, Pierre; Beutels, Philippe (2012). Modeling Infectious Disease Parameters Based on Serological and Social Contact Data - A Modern Statistical Perspective. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4614-4071-0.
  • ^ Goeyvaerts, Nele; Hens, Niel; Ogunjimi, Benson; Aerts, Marc; Shkedy, Ziv; Van Damme, Pierre; Beutels, Philippe (2010), "Estimating infectious disease parameters from data on social contacts and serological status", Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series C (Applied Statistics), 59 (2), Royal Statistical Society: 255–277, arXiv:0907.4000, doi:10.1111/j.1467-9876.2009.00693.x, S2CID 15947480
  • ^ Vynnyvky, Emilia; White, Richard G. (2010), An Introduction to Infectious Disease Modelling, OUP Oxford, ISBN 978-0-19-856-576-5
  • ^ Wallinga, Jacco; Teunis, Peter; Kretzschmar, Mirjam (2006), "Using Data on Social Contacts to Estimate Age-specific Transmission Parameters for Respiratory-spread Infectious Agents", American Journal of Epidemiology, 164 (10): 936–944, doi:10.1093/aje/kwj317, hdl:10029/6739, PMID 16968863

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