News & Events

Subscribe to email list

Please select the email list(s) to which you wish to subscribe.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA

Enter the characters shown in the image.

User menu

You are here

CANCELLED: Geo-dependent spatial models of infectious disease transmission

Tuesday, March 5, 2019 - 11:00 to 12:00
Rob Deardon, Associate Professor of Biostatistics, University of Calgary
Statistics Seminar
Room 4192, Earth Sciences Building (2207 Main Mall)

UNFORTUNATELY, TODAY'S SEMINAR IS CANCELLED:

Numerous examples exist of infectious disease models that incorporate spatial distance and other covariates at the individual level. This has been most noticeable perhaps in agricultural case studies such as the UK 2001 foot and mouth disease epidemic. However, both in agriculture and public health, many salient covariates that display spatial structure are collected at a regional level. Here, we extend individual level infectious disease models of the type proposed by Deardon et al. (2010) to incorporate such spatially structured regional/aggregate level information. This is done primarily within the context of influenza data from Calgary, Alberta. We discuss issues of both inference and computation.

Deardon, R., Brooks, S., Grenfell, B., Keeling, M., Tildesley, M., Savill, N., Shaw, D., Woolhouse, M. (2010). Inference for individual-level models of infectious diseases in large populations. Statistica Sinica  20:239-261.