Linking spontaneous behavioral changes to disease transmission dynamics: behavior change includes periodic oscillation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6540674
DOI10.1007/s11538-024-01298-wzbMath1539.92157MaRDI QIDQ6540674
Jane M. Heffernan, Tangjuan Li, Yanni Xiao
Publication date: 17 May 2024
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Bogdanov-Takens bifurcationbehavior changeimitation processsaddle-node homoclinic bifurcationactual behavioral data
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- An HIV infection model based on a vectored immunoprophylaxis experiment
- Risk perception and effectiveness of uncoordinated behavioral responses in an emerging epidemic
- Global analysis of an SEIR model with varying population size and vaccination
- Analysis of stability and bifurcation for an SEIR epidemic model with saturated recovery rate
- On the definition and the computation of the basic reproduction ratio \(R_ 0\) in models for infectious diseases in heterogeneous populations
- Three types of matrix stability
- Elements of applied bifurcation theory.
- Spontaneous behavioural changes in response to epidemics
- Dynamical models of tuberculosis and their applications
- Saturation recovery leads to multiple endemic equilibria and backward bifurcation
- Reproduction numbers and sub-threshold endemic equilibria for compartmental models of disease transmission
- Spatio-temporal games of voluntary vaccination in the absence of the infection: the interplay of local versus non-local information about vaccine adverse events
- Herd behaviors in epidemics: a dynamics-coupled evolutionary games approach
- Controlling multiple COVID-19 epidemic waves: an insight from a multi-scale model linking the behaviour change dynamics to the disease transmission dynamics
- Open-minded imitation can achieve near-optimal vaccination coverage
- Global properties of infectious disease models with nonlinear incidence
- Backward bifurcation of an epidemic model with treatment
- Game theoretic modelling of infectious disease dynamics and intervention methods: a review
- Volterra Multipliers I
- Erratum: Volterra Multipliers II
- Uniformly Persistent Systems
- Evolutionary Games and Population Dynamics
- Vaccinating behaviour guided by imitation and aspiration
- Effects of social-distancing on infectious disease dynamics: an evolutionary game theory and economic perspective
- Dynamical systems in population biology
- COVID-19 vaccination and healthcare demand
This page was built for publication: Linking spontaneous behavioral changes to disease transmission dynamics: behavior change includes periodic oscillation