Using a Socioeconomic Segregation Burn-in Model to Initialise an Agent-Based Model for Infectious Diseases
Authored by Elizabeth Hunter, Namee Brian Mac, John Kelleher
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3870
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/models/community/town_model_burnin
Abstract
Socioeconomic status can have an important effect on health. In this
paper we: (i) propose using house price data as a publicly available
proxy for socioeconomic status to examine neighbourhood socioeconomic
status at a more fine grained resolution than is available in Irish
Central Statistics Office data; (ii) use a dissimilarity index to
demonstrate and measure the existence of socioeconomic clustering at a
neighbourhood level; (iii) demonstrate that using a standard ABM
initialisation process based on CSO small area data results in ABMs
systematically underestimating the socioeconomic clustering in Irish
neighbourhoods; (iv) demonstrate that ABM models are better calibrated
towards socioeconomic clustering after a segregation models has been run
for a burn-in period after initial model setup; and (v) that running a
socioeconomic segregation model during the initiation of an ABM
epidemiology model can have an effect on the outbreak patterns of the
model. Our results support the use of segregation models as useful
additions to the initiation process of ABM for epidemiology.
Tags
Simulation
Agent-Based
Infectious disease
Model
segregation model
Socioeconomic status