Selected article for: "behavior change and utility function"

Author: Azizi, Asma; Montalvo, Cesar; Espinoza, Baltazar; Kang, Yun; Castillo-Chavez, Carlos
Title: Epidemics on networks: Reducing disease transmission using health emergency declarations and peer communication
  • Document date: 2019_12_11
  • ID: 4uy1w3oj_3
    Snippet: Models that couple disease dynamics and awareness to levels of infection risk have been proposed. These models have been used to explore the impact of behavioral changes on the spread of infection. In the review paper of Wang et al. (Wang et al., 2015) classify models as Rule-Based Models, those where individuals make their decision about changing behavior independently of others, and Economic-Epidemiology models (EE models), that is, models wher.....
    Document: Models that couple disease dynamics and awareness to levels of infection risk have been proposed. These models have been used to explore the impact of behavioral changes on the spread of infection. In the review paper of Wang et al. (Wang et al., 2015) classify models as Rule-Based Models, those where individuals make their decision about changing behavior independently of others, and Economic-Epidemiology models (EE models), that is, models where individuals change their behavior in order to maximize their own utility function (what they value) subject to available resources. The EE models account for the responses that individuals take in response to infection risks on disease prevalence at the population level. The modeling and results reported in this manuscript are more closely related to those used in Rule-Based Models.

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