Selected article for: "binomial distribution and incubation period"

Author: Alex Perkins; Sean M. Cavany; Sean M Moore; Rachel J Oidtman; Anita Lerch; Marya Poterek
Title: Estimating unobserved SARS-CoV-2 infections in the United States
  • Document date: 2020_3_18
  • ID: fb8mca1h_24
    Snippet: • Symptom onset: The number of new symptomatic infections on day t was drawn from a binomial distribution with the number of trials equal to the number of infections with time of potential symptom onset on day t, and the probability of success equal to the proportion of infections that are symptomatic. For infections that were simulated to result in symptoms, the time of symptom onset was drawn from a Weibull incubation period distribution with.....
    Document: • Symptom onset: The number of new symptomatic infections on day t was drawn from a binomial distribution with the number of trials equal to the number of infections with time of potential symptom onset on day t, and the probability of success equal to the proportion of infections that are symptomatic. For infections that were simulated to result in symptoms, the time of symptom onset was drawn from a Weibull incubation period distribution with mean 7.07 (3) and added to each individual's exposure time.

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