English

Toward a comprehensive system for constructing compartmental epidemic models

Populations and Evolution 2023-07-21 v1

Abstract

Compartmental models are valuable tools for investigating infectious diseases. Researchers building such models typically begin with a simple structure where compartments correspond to individuals with different epidemiological statuses, e.g., the classic SIR model which splits the population into susceptible, infected, and recovered compartments. However, as more information about a specific pathogen is discovered, or as a means to investigate the effects of heterogeneities, it becomes useful to stratify models further -- for example by age, geographic location, or pathogen strain. The operation of constructing stratified compartmental models from a pair of simpler models resembles the Cartesian product used in graph theory, but several key differences complicate matters. In this article we give explicit mathematical definitions for several so-called ``model products'' and provide examples where each is suitable. We also provide examples of model stratification where no existing model product will generate the desired result.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2307.10308,
  title  = {Toward a comprehensive system for constructing compartmental epidemic models},
  author = {Darren Flynn-Primrose and Steven C. Walker and Michael Li and Benjamin M. Bolker and David J. D. Earn and Jonathan Dushoff},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2307.10308},
  year   = {2023}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T11:35:08.531Z