Spontaneous social distancing in response to a simulated epidemic: a virtual experiment
Authored by Adam Kleczkowski, Savi Maharaj, Susan Rasmussen, Lynn Williams, Nicole Cairns
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2336-7
Sponsors:
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Studies of social distancing during epidemics have found
that the strength of the response can have a decisive impact on the
outcome. In previous work we developed a model of social distancing
driven by individuals' risk attitude, a parameter which determines the
extent to which social contacts are reduced in response to a given
infection level. We showed by simulation that a strong response, driven
by a highly cautious risk attitude, can quickly suppress an epidemic.
However, a moderately cautious risk attitude gives weak control and, by
prolonging the epidemic without reducing its impact, may yield a worse
outcome than doing nothing. In real societies, social distancing may
arise spontaneously from individual choices rather than being imposed
centrally. There is little data available about this as opportunistic
data collection during epidemics is difficult. Our study uses a
simulated epidemic in a computer game setting to measure the social
distancing response.
Methods: Two hundred thirty participants played a computer game
simulating an epidemic on a spatial network. The player controls one
individual in a population of 2500 (with others controlled by computer)
and decides how many others to contact each day. To mimic real-world
trade-offs, the player is motivated to make contact by being rewarded
with points, while simultaneously being deterred by the threat of
infection. Participants completed a questionnaire regarding
psychological measures of health protection motivation. Finally, simulations were used to compare the experimentally-observed response to
epidemics with no response.
Results: Participants reduced contacts in response to infection in a
manner consistent with our model of social distancing. The
experimentally observed response was too weak to halt epidemics quickly, resulting in a somewhat reduced attack rate and a substantially reduced
peak attack rate, but longer duration and fewer social contacts, compared to no response. Little correlation was observed between
participants' risk attitudes and the psychological measures.
Conclusions: Our cognitive model of social distancing matches responses
to a simulated epidemic. If these responses indicate real world
behaviour, spontaneous social distancing can be expected to reduce peak
attack rates. However, additional measures are needed if it is important
to stop an epidemic quickly.
Tags
Risk
Model
Pandemic influenza
Infectious-diseases
Spread
Protection motivation theory
Behavioral-responses
Precautionary behavior
Public avoidance
Perceptions