Author: Sebastian Alexander Muller; Michael Balmer; Andreas Neumann; Kai Nagel
Title: Mobility traces and spreading of COVID-19 Document date: 2020_3_30
ID: ejdbx7q7_54
Snippet: The same holds for facilities, where the data is actually constructed such that there are typically around 400 persons per facility. That is, any work, shopping, or leisure facility can have up to 400 visitors at the same time, and every person that has that facility in its trajectory can interact with all of these persons. This number of interacting agents is, however, limited (see infections at facilities and in vehicles). This results in an is.....
Document: The same holds for facilities, where the data is actually constructed such that there are typically around 400 persons per facility. That is, any work, shopping, or leisure facility can have up to 400 visitors at the same time, and every person that has that facility in its trajectory can interact with all of these persons. This number of interacting agents is, however, limited (see infections at facilities and in vehicles). This results in an issue for home locations: Our data model does not differentiate between "persons living in the same block" and "persons living in the same household". With the current state of our modelling, the infection probability at home locations thus will have to average over these situations.
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