Impact of the topology of metapopulations on the resurgence of epidemics rendered by a new multiscale hybrid modeling approach
Authored by Christian Ernest Vincenot, Kazuyuki Moriya
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2011.04.002
Sponsors:
Luxembourg National Research Fund
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Simulating epidemics in metapopulations is a challenging issue due to
the large demographic and geographic scales to incorporate. Traditional
epidemiologic models choose to simplify reality by ignoring both the
spatial distribution of populations and possible intrapopulation
heterogeneities, whereas more recent solutions based on Individual-Based
Modeling (IBM) can achieve high precision but are costly to compute and
analyze. We introduce here an original alternative to these two
approaches, which relies on a novel hybrid modeling framework and
incarnates a multiscale view of epidemics. The model relies on a
technical fusion of two modeling paradigms: System Dynamics (SD) and
Individual-Based Modeling. It features an aggregated representation of
local outbreaks rendered in SD, and at the same time a
spatially-explicit simulation of the spread between populations
simulated in IBM. We first present the design of this deterministic
model, show that it can reproduce the dynamics of real resurgent
epidemics, and infer from the sensitivity of several spatial factors
absent in compartmental models the importance of having large-scale
epidemiological processes represented inside of an explicitly
disaggregated metapopulation. After discussing the implications of
results obtained from simulation runs and the applicability of this
model, we conclude that SD-IB hybrid modeling can be an interesting
choice to represent epidemics in a spatially-explicit way without
necessarily taking into account individual heterogeneities, and
therefore it can be considered as a valuable alternative to simple
compartmental models suffering from detrimental effects of the
well-mixed assumption. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Agent
Dynamics
Influenza
Vaccination
Populations
Infectious-diseases
Cellular-automaton model
Protocol
Transmissibility
Propagation