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Analysis, Prediction, and Control of Epidemics: A Survey from Scalar to Dynamic Network Models (2103.00181v1)

Published 27 Feb 2021 in math.DS, cs.SI, cs.SY, eess.SY, and math.OC

Abstract: During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, mathematical models of epidemic spreading have emerged as powerful tools to produce valuable predictions of the evolution of the pandemic, helping public health authorities decide which intervention policies should be implemented. The study of these models -- grounded in the systems theory and often analyzed using control-theoretic tools -- is an extremely important research area for many researchers from different fields, including epidemiology, engineering, physics, mathematics, computer science, sociology, economics, and management. In this survey, we review the history and present the state of the art in the modeling, analysis, and control of epidemic dynamics. We discuss different approaches to epidemic modeling, either deterministic or stochastic, ranging from the first implementations of scalar systems of differential equations to describing the epidemic spreading at the population level, and to more recent models on dynamic networks, which capture the spatial spread and the time-varying nature of human interactions.

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Authors (2)
  1. Lorenzo Zino (28 papers)
  2. Ming Cao (128 papers)
Citations (83)