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Leveraging Network Science for Social Distancing to Curb Pandemic Spread. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • COVID-19 has drastically changed daily life, prompting countries to implement national emergencies and strict public health guidelines while the scientific community works on effective vaccines.
  • The authors propose three optimization strategies based on network science to help manage human mobility and limit interactions between susceptible and infected individuals, using a new metric called contagion potential to measure infectivity.
  • Their simulation experiments show that these strategies significantly reduce the spread of the virus compared to traditional mobility models, and they introduce a mobile app that offers location recommendations to users to enhance these mobility strategies.

Article Abstract

COVID-19 has irreversibly upended the course of human life and compelled countries to invoke national emergencies and strict public guidelines. As the scientific community is in the early stages of rigorous clinical testing to come up with effective vaccination measures, the world is still heavily reliant on social distancing to curb the rapid spread and mortality rates. In this work, we present three optimization strategies to guide human mobility and restrict contact of susceptible and infective individuals. The proposed strategies rely on well-studied concepts of network science, such as clustering and homophily, as well as two different scenarios of the SEIRD epidemic model. We also propose a new metric, called contagion potential, to gauge the infectivity of individuals in a social setting. Our extensive simulation experiments show that the recommended mobility approaches slow down spread considerably when compared against several standard human mobility models. Finally, as a case study of the mobility strategies, we introduce a mobile application, , that provides periodic location recommendations to the registered app users.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8545212PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3058206DOI Listing

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