Emulation of epidemics via Bluetooth-based virtual safe virus spread: Experimental setup, software, and data

Author:

Asanjarani AzamORCID,Shausan AminathORCID,Chew Keng,Graham Thomas,Henderson Shane G.ORCID,Jansen Hermanus M.,Short Kirsty R.ORCID,Taylor Peter G.ORCID,Vuorinen Aapeli,Yadav Yuvraj,Ziedins Ilze,Nazarathy Yoni

Abstract

We describe an experimental setup and a currently running experiment for evaluating how physical interactions over time and between individuals affect the spread of epidemics. Our experiment involves the voluntary use of the Safe Blues Android app by participants at The University of Auckland (UoA) City Campus in New Zealand. The app spreads multiple virtual safe virus strands via Bluetooth depending on the physical proximity of the subjects. The evolution of the virtual epidemics is recorded as they spread through the population. The data is presented as a real-time (and historical) dashboard. A simulation model is applied to calibrate strand parameters. Participants’ locations are not recorded, but participants are rewarded based on the duration of participation within a geofenced area, and aggregate participation numbers serve as part of the data. The 2021 experimental data is available as an open-source anonymized dataset, and once the experiment is complete, the remaining data will be made available. This paper outlines the experimental setup, software, subject-recruitment practices, ethical considerations, and dataset description. The paper also highlights current experimental results in view of the lockdown that started in New Zealand at 23:59 on August 17, 2021. The experiment was initially planned in the New Zealand environment, expected to be free of COVID and lockdowns after 2020. However, a COVID Delta strain lockdown shuffled the cards and the experiment is currently extended into 2022.

Funder

Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers

UoA Faculty of Science Research & Development Fund

Australian Research Council

Army Research Office

National Science Foundation

UQ Research Support Package: Strategic Research Investment

National Health and Medical Research Council

Te Pūnaha Matatini

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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