Risk perception in epidemic modeling

Franco Bagnoli, Pietro Liò, and Luca Sguanci
Phys. Rev. E 76, 061904 – Published 5 December 2007

Abstract

We investigate the effects of risk perception in a simple model of epidemic spreading. We assume that the perception of the risk of being infected depends on the fraction of neighbors that are ill. The effect of this factor is to decrease the infectivity, that therefore becomes a dynamical component of the model. We study the problem in the mean-field approximation and by numerical simulations for regular, random, and scale-free networks. We show that for homogeneous and random networks, there is always a value of perception that stops the epidemics. In the “worst-case” scenario of a scale-free network with diverging input connectivity, a linear perception cannot stop the epidemics; however, we show that a nonlinear increase of the perception risk may lead to the extinction of the disease. This transition is discontinuous, and is not predicted by the mean-field analysis.

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  • Received 15 May 2007

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.76.061904

©2007 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Franco Bagnoli*

  • Department of Energy, University of Florence, Via S. Marta, 3 I-50139 Firenze, Italy and CSDC and INFN, sez. Firenze

Pietro Liò

  • Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, JJ Thompson Avenue, CB30FD Cambridge, United Kingdom

Luca Sguanci

  • Centro per lo Studio di Dinamiche Complesse (CSDC), University of Florence, Via G. Sansone 1, Sesto Fiorentino (FI)

  • *franco.bagnoli@unifi.it

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Issue

Vol. 76, Iss. 6 — December 2007

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