he spread of epidemics is structured by delay distributions, including the now-famous “serial interval” between the symptom-onset times of an infector and an infectee (often conflated with the “generation interval” between infection times). Defining these time distributions clearly, and describing how they relate to each other, and to key parameters of disease spread, poses interesting theoretical and practical questions, some of which are still open.
I will discuss how transmission intervals link the “speed” and “strength” of epidemics, issues in their estimation, and their role in helping monitor changes in the parameters underlying the spread of COVID-19 disease.
Math Bio Seminar
April 22, 2022
12 PM - 1 PM, Arizona time
Wexler A309 and virtual via Zoom
Those joining remotely can use the link: https://asu.zoom.us/j/84911973744
Jonathan Dushoff
Departments of Biology and Mathematics
McMaster University
Ontario, Canada