Applied Probability Insights into Nonlinear Epidemic Dynamics with Independent Jumps
Abstract
This paper focuses on the analysis of a stochastic SAIRS-type epidemic model that explicitly incorporates the roles of asymptomatic and symptomatic infectious individuals in disease transmission dynamics. Asymptomatic carriers, often undetected due to the lack of symptoms, play a crucial role in the spread of many communicable diseases, including COVID-19. Our model also accounts for vaccination and considers the stochastic effects of environmental and population-level randomness using Lévy processes. We begin by demonstrating the existence and uniqueness of a global positive solution to the proposed stochastic system, ensuring the model's mathematical validity. Subsequently, we derive sufficient conditions under which the disease either becomes extinct or persists over time, depending on the parameters and initial conditions. The analysis highlights the influence of random perturbations, asymptomatic transmission, and vaccination strategies on disease dynamics. Finally, we conduct comprehensive numerical simulations to validate the theoretical findings and illustrate the behavior of the model under various scenarios of randomness and parameter settings. These results provide valuable insights into the stochastic dynamics of epidemic outbreaks and inform strategies for disease management and control.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- January 2025
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2501.07112
- Bibcode:
- 2025arXiv250107112B
- Keywords:
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- Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution;
- Mathematics - Probability;
- Nonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and Solitons;
- Physics - Physics and Society