• DocumentCode
    1825692
  • Title

    Modeling interaction between individuals, social networks and public policy to support public health epidemiology

  • Author

    Bisset, Keith R. ; Feng, Xizhou ; Marathe, Madhav ; Yardi, Shrirang

  • Author_Institution
    Virginia Bioinf. Inst., Virginia State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    13-16 Dec. 2009
  • Firstpage
    2020
  • Lastpage
    2031
  • Abstract
    Human behavior, social networks, and civil infrastructure are closely intertwined. Understanding their co-evolution is critical for designing public policies. Human behaviors and day-to-day activities of individuals create dense social interactions that provide a perfect fabric for fast disease propagation. Conversely, people´s behavior in response to public policies and their perception of the crisis can dramatically alter normally stable social interactions. Effective planning and response strategies must take these complicated interactions into account. The basic problem can be modeled as a coupled co-evolving graph dynamical system and can also be viewed as partially observable Markov decision process. As a way to overcome the computational hurdles, we describe an High Performance Computing oriented computer simulation to study this class of problems. Our method provides a novel way to study the co-evolution of human behavior and disease dynamics in very large, realistic social networks with over 100 Million nodes and 6 Billion edges.
  • Keywords
    Markov processes; behavioural sciences; digital simulation; diseases; government policies; graph theory; medical computing; social networking (online); Markov decision process; civil infrastructure; coupled coevolving graph dynamical system; fast disease propagation; high performance computing oriented computer simulation; human behavior coevolution; public health epidemiology; social networks;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Simulation Conference (WSC), Proceedings of the 2009 Winter
  • Conference_Location
    Austin, TX
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-5770-0
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/WSC.2009.5429672
  • Filename
    5429672