| Literature DB >> 29481258 |
Eugenio Valdano1, Michele Re Fiorentin2, Chiara Poletto1, Vittoria Colizza1,3.
Abstract
Current understanding of the critical outbreak condition on temporal networks relies on approximations (time scale separation, discretization) that may bias the results. We propose a theoretical framework to compute the epidemic threshold in continuous time through the infection propagator approach. We introduce the weak commutation condition allowing the interpretation of annealed networks, activity-driven networks, and time scale separation into one formalism. Our work provides a coherent connection between discrete and continuous time representations applicable to realistic scenarios.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29481258 PMCID: PMC7219439 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.068302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161
FIG. 1.Discrete sampling of a continuous-time temporal network. Links (, , ) activate in time as marked by the colored segments (top). This time evolution is sampled at intervals , building a sequence of snapshots (bottom), corresponding to adjacency matrices .
FIG. 2.Performance of the infection propagator estimate of the epidemic threshold in the continuous-time limit under the weak commutation approximation [Eq. (13)]. Panels report the average simulated endemic prevalence as a function of for the activity-driven model (a) and the bursty model (b). Different colors refer to explored values of the recovery rate . The vertical dashed line is the prediction for the critical transmissibility provided by Eq. (13).