Networked models for SARS and avian influenza
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] M. Small,et al. Hub nodes inhibit the outbreak of epidemic under voluntary vaccination , 2010 .
[2] Junan Lu,et al. Generating an Assortative Network with a Given Degree Distribution , 2008, Int. J. Bifurc. Chaos.
[3] Jin Zhou,et al. Scale-free networks which are highly assortative but not small world. , 2008, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[4] M. Small,et al. Scale-free distribution of avian influenza outbreaks. , 2007, Physical review letters.
[5] I. Kiss,et al. The network of sheep movements within Great Britain: network properties and their implications for infectious disease spread , 2006, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[6] M. Small,et al. Super-spreaders and the rate of transmission of the SARS virus , 2006, Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena.
[7] T. Geisel,et al. The scaling laws of human travel , 2006, Nature.
[8] Elizabeth L. Bennett,et al. Wildlife Trade and Global Disease Emergence , 2005, Emerging infectious diseases.
[9] C. K. Michael Tse,et al. Small World and Scale Free Model of Transmission of SARS , 2005, Int. J. Bifurc. Chaos.
[10] Chi K. Tse,et al. Clustering model for transmission of the SARS virus: application to epidemic control and risk assessment , 2005, Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications.
[11] Catherine H Mercer,et al. Scale-Free Networks and Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Description of Observed Patterns of Sexual Contacts in Britain and Zimbabwe , 2004, Sexually transmitted diseases.
[12] Aravind Srinivasan,et al. Modelling disease outbreaks in realistic urban social networks , 2004, Nature.
[13] Michel L. Goldstein,et al. Problems with fitting to the power-law distribution , 2004, cond-mat/0402322.
[14] Joseph S. Bresee,et al. Cluster of SARS among Medical Students Exposed to Single Patient, Hong Kong , 2004, Emerging infectious diseases.
[15] Tze Wai Wong,et al. Probable Secondary Infections in Households of SARS Patients in Hong Kong , 2004, Emerging infectious diseases.
[16] N P French,et al. Small-world topology of UK racing: the potential for rapid spread of infectious agents. , 2010, Equine veterinary journal.
[17] D. Hui,et al. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS): epidemiology, diagnosis and management , 2003, Thorax.
[18] C. Fraser,et al. Transmission Dynamics of the Etiological Agent of SARS in Hong Kong: Impact of Public Health Interventions , 2003, Science.
[19] C. Fraser,et al. Epidemiological determinants of spread of causal agent of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong , 2003, The Lancet.
[20] Alessandro Vespignani,et al. Absence of epidemic threshold in scale-free networks with degree correlations. , 2002, Physical review letters.
[21] S. Shen-Orr,et al. Network motifs: simple building blocks of complex networks. , 2002, Science.
[22] S. Bornholdt,et al. Scale-free topology of e-mail networks. , 2002, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[23] A. Barabasi,et al. Halting viruses in scale-free networks. , 2001, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[24] R. May,et al. Infection dynamics on scale-free networks. , 2001, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[25] L. Amaral,et al. The web of human sexual contacts , 2001, Nature.
[26] Alessandro Vespignani,et al. Epidemic spreading in scale-free networks. , 2000, Physical review letters.
[27] Albert,et al. Emergence of scaling in random networks , 1999, Science.
[28] Duncan J. Watts,et al. Collective dynamics of ‘small-world’ networks , 1998, Nature.