DocumentCode
170797
Title
Epidemic thresholds with external agents
Author
Banerjee, Sean ; Chatterjee, Avhishek ; Shakkottai, Sanjay
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
April 27 2014-May 2 2014
Firstpage
2202
Lastpage
2210
Abstract
We study the effect of external infection sources on phase transitions in epidemic processes. In particular, we consider an epidemic spreading on a network via the SIS/SIR dynamics, which in addition is aided by external agents - sources unconstrained by the graph, but possessing a limited infection rate or virulence. Such a model captures many existing models of externally aided epidemics, and finds use in many settings - epidemiology, marketing and advertising, network robustness, etc. We provide a detailed characterization of the impact of external agents on epidemic thresholds. In particular, for the SIS model, we show that any external infection strategy with constant virulence either fails to significantly affect the lifetime of an epidemic, or at best, sustains the epidemic for a lifetime which is polynomial in the number of nodes. On the other hand, a random external-infection strategy, with rate increasing linearly in the number of infected nodes, succeeds under some conditions to sustain an exponential epidemic lifetime. We obtain similar sharp thresholds for the SIR model, and discuss the relevance of our results in a variety of settings.
Keywords
epidemics; graph theory; SIS-SIR dynamics; advertising; epidemic processes; epidemic spreading; epidemic thresholds; epidemiology; external agents; external infection sources; externally aided epidemics; graph; limited infection rate; marketing; network robustness; phase transitions; random external-infection strategy; virulence; Advertising; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Computers; Conferences; Markov processes; Polynomials;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
INFOCOM, 2014 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location
Toronto, ON
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFOCOM.2014.6848163
Filename
6848163
Link To Document