Human Mobility-based Individual-level Epidemic Simulation Platform

Author:

Fan Zipei1ORCID,Yang Chuang2ORCID,Zhang Zhiwen2,Song Xuan1,Liu Yinghao2ORCID,Jiang Renhe1,Chen Quanjun1,Shibasaki Ryosuke2

Affiliation:

1. Southern University of Science and Technology and Center for Spatial Information Science, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan

2. Center for Spatial Information Science, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan

Abstract

COVID-19 has spread worldwide, and over 140 million people have been confirmed infected, over 3 million people have died, and the numbers are still increasing dramatically. The consensus has been reached by scientists that COVID-19 can be transmitted in an airborne way, and human-to-human transmission is the primary cause of the fast spread of COVID-19. Thus, mobility should be restricted to control the epidemic, and many governments worldwide have succeeded in curbing the spread by means of control policies like city lockdowns. Against this background, we propose a novel fine-grained transmission model based on real-world human mobility data and develop a platform that helps the researcher or governors to explore the possibility of future development of the epidemic spreading and simulate the outcomes of human mobility and the epidemic state under different epidemic control policies. The proposed platform can also support users to determine potential contacts, discover regions with high infectious risks, and assess the individual infectious risk. The multi-functional platform aims at helping the users to evaluate the effectiveness of a regional lockdown policy and facilitate the process of screening and more accurately targeting the potential virus carriers.

Funder

Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists

Promotion of Science, Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT), and Strategic International Collaborative Research Program

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics,Geometry and Topology,Computer Science Applications,Modeling and Simulation,Information Systems,Signal Processing

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