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Multivariable Behavioral Change Modeling of Epidemics in the Presence of Undetected Infections

Published: March 2, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2503.00982v1

By: Caitlin Ward, Rob Deardon, Alexandra M. Schmidt

Potential Business Impact:

Predicts disease spread better by watching behavior.

Business Areas:
Simulation Software

Epidemic models are invaluable tools to understand and implement strategies to control the spread of infectious diseases, as well as to inform public health policies and resource allocation. However, current modeling approaches have limitations that reduce their practical utility, such as the exclusion of human behavioral change in response to the epidemic or ignoring the presence of undetected infectious individuals in the population. These limitations became particularly evident during the COVID-19 pandemic, underscoring the need for more accurate and informative models. Motivated by these challenges, we develop a novel Bayesian epidemic modeling framework to better capture the complexities of disease spread by incorporating behavioral responses and undetected infections. In particular, our framework makes three contributions: 1) leveraging additional data on hospitalizations and deaths in modeling the disease dynamics, 2) accounting data uncertainty arising from the large presence of asymptomatic and undetected infections, and 3) allowing the population behavioral change to be dynamically influenced by multiple data sources (cases and deaths). We thoroughly investigate the properties of the proposed model via simulation, and illustrate its utility on COVID-19 data from Montreal and Miami.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Repos / Data Links

Page Count
19 pages

Category
Statistics:
Methodology