Selected article for: "generation interval and time individual"

Author: Sang Woo Park; Daniel M Cornforth; Jonathan Dushoff; Joshua S Weitz
Title: The time scale of asymptomatic transmission affects estimates of epidemic potential in the COVID-19 outbreak
  • Document date: 2020_3_13
  • ID: 50zrnau8_6
    Snippet: is the (which was not peer-reviewed) The copyright holder for this preprint . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.09.20033514 doi: medRxiv preprint can transmit the disease to others, but they may differ in their intrinsic reproduction numbers, R a and R s , respectively, as well as intrinsic generation-interval distributions [12] , g a (Ï„ ) and g s (Ï„ ). Generation intervals, which are defined as the time between when an individual is infected and.....
    Document: is the (which was not peer-reviewed) The copyright holder for this preprint . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.09.20033514 doi: medRxiv preprint can transmit the disease to others, but they may differ in their intrinsic reproduction numbers, R a and R s , respectively, as well as intrinsic generation-interval distributions [12] , g a (Ï„ ) and g s (Ï„ ). Generation intervals, which are defined as the time between when an individual is infected and when that individual infects another person [13] , shape the relationship between the epidemic growth rate r and the reproduction number [14] . The differences in the generation-interval distributions between asymptomatic and symptomatic cases can be caused by the differences in the natural history of infection irrespective of their transmissibility: Individuals with asymptomatic infections may recover faster and have short generation intervals, or have persistent infection and long generation intervals (cf. [15] ).

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