SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

14
The SIS immortality transition in small networks Petter Holme Sungkyunkwan University

Transcript of SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Page 1: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

The SIS immortality transition in small networks

Petter Holme

Sungkyunkwan University

Page 2: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

The SIS model

Models diseases where re-infection is possible

Gonorrhea, Chlamydia, are exampled from sexually transmitted infections (and thus appro-priate for network epidemiology)

A population of susceptible (S) and infectious (I)

When S meets I, there is a probability λ that S will become I

I becomes S again after some time, or with some chance per unit of time

Page 3: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Two areas of current research

1.The epidemic threshold (phase transition in λ).

2.The extinction probability as a function of λ.

Both points when N → ∞

Page 4: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

The immortality transition

There is another phase transition (threshold)— when λ = 1. The mean time to extinction diverges at this point.

It may seem trivial (since it is not an emergent property in the N → ∞), but we will pretend it is not.

Page 5: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Our example networks

We could take any small networks with a variety of network structures, but to honor the network epidemiology pioneers we use:

D. M. Auerbach, W. W. Darrow, H. W. Jaffe, and J. W. Curran, Am. J. Med. 76, 487 (1984).

S. Haraldsdottir, S. Gupta, and R. M. Anderson, J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. 5, 374 (1992).

Page 6: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

America

Page 7: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Iceland

Page 8: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Survival probability vs. λ

America

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

0

0.25

0.5

0.75

0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25

λ

ξ

λ

ξ

Page 9: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Survival probability vs. λ

Iceland

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

0

0.25

0.5

0 0.05 0.1

λ

ξ

λ

ξ

Page 10: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Survival probability vs. time

0 5 100 5 10

0.1

1

10–6

10–5

10–4

10–3

10–2

0.1

1

10–6

10–5

10–4

10–3

10–2

×103 ×103t t

ξ ξ

λ = 0.07λ = 0.065λ = 0.06

λ = 0.18λ = 0.17λ = 0.16

America Iceland

Page 11: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Time constant vs. λ

0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.1

106

105

104

103

100

10

106

105

104

103

100

10

λλ

τ τ

America Iceland

τ = A exp(λ / l) +B (1 – λ)–ζ

Page 12: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Contribution of individual nodes

Measure America Iceland

0-pa

ram

. ki 0.73(4) 0.974(2)ni 0.82(4) 0.75(5)mi 0.83(3) 0.965(2)

i 0.64(4) 0.917(6)

1-pa

ram

. max Ki 0.76(5) 0.98(2)for α 0.17(8) 0.038(5)max Ri 0.72(6) 0.97(4)for d 0.99(1) 0.99(1)

ε

a = ζ(G ) / ζ(G) i i

Page 13: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Contribution of individual nodesa = ζ(G ) / ζ(G) i i

1

2

1

3

32

America Iceland

Page 14: SIS Immortality Transition for KPS spring meeting 2015

Thanks to

1) You, for listening.

2) National Research Foundation of Korea for funding.

Preprint at: arXiv:1503.01909