A spatio-temporal individual-based network framework for West Nile virus in the USA: parameter estimation and spreading pattern selection using approximate Bayesian computation

Date

2018-12-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

West Nile virus (WNV) ---a mosquito-borne arbovirus--- entered the USA through New York City in 1999 and spread to the contiguous USA within three years while transitioning from epidemic outbreaks to endemic transmission. The virus is transmitted by vector competent mosquitoes and maintained in the avian populations. WNV spatial distribution is mainly determined by the movement of residential and migratory avian populations. We developed an individual-level heterogeneous network framework across the USA with the goal of understanding the long-range spatial distribution of WNV. To this end, we proposed three distance dispersal kernels model: 1) exponential ---short-range dispersal, 2) power-law ---long-range dispersal in all directions, and 3) power-law biased by flyway direction ---long-range dispersal only along established migratory routes. To select the appropriate dispersal kernel we used the human case data and adopted a model selection framework based on approximate Bayesian computation with sequential Monte Carlo sampling (ABC-SMC). From estimated parameters, we find that the power-law biased by flyway direction kernel is the best kernel to fit WNV human case data, supporting the hypothesis of long-range WNV transmission is mainly along the migratory bird flyways. Through extensive simulation from 2014 to 2016, we proposed and tested hypothetical mitigation strategies and found that mosquito population reduction in the infected states and neighboring states is potentially cost-effective.

Description

Keywords

Network, Parameter estimation, model comparison, spreading

Graduation Month

December

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Major Professor

Caterina M. Scoglio

Date

Type

Report

Citation