학술논문

Development of a Discrete Spatial-Temporal SEIR Simulator for Modeling Infectious Diseases
Document Type
Technical Report
Author
Source
Other Information: PBD: 1 Nov 2000
Subject
59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES IMMUNITY
IMPLEMENTATION
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
SIMULATORS
TIME DEPENDENCE
SPACE DEPENDENCE
S CODES
DISEASE INCIDENCE
PATHOLOGY
Language
English
Abstract
Multiple techniques have been developed to model the temporal evolution of infectious diseases. Some of these techniques have also been adapted to model the spatial evolution of the disease. This report examines the application of one such technique, the SEIR model, to the spatial and temporal evolution of disease. Applications of the SEIR model are reviewed briefly and an adaptation to the traditional SEIR model is presented. This adaptation allows for modeling the spatial evolution of the disease stages at the individual level. The transmission of the disease between individuals is modeled explicitly through the use of exposure likelihood functions rather than the global transmission rate applied to populations in the traditional implementation of the SEIR model. These adaptations allow for the consideration of spatially variable (heterogeneous) susceptibility and immunity within the population. The adaptations also allow for modeling both contagious and non-contagious diseases. The results of a number of numerical experiments to explore the effect of model parameters on the spread of an example disease are presented.