Optimal resource diffusion for suppressing disease spreading in multiplex networks
Xiaolong Chen, Wei Wang, Shimin Cai, H. Eugene Stanley, Lidia A., Braunstein

TL;DR
This study models how resource diffusion in multiplex networks influences epidemic spreading, revealing phase transition changes and optimal strategies for disease suppression based on interlayer correlations.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled epidemic-resource diffusion model in multiplex networks, analyzing the effects of preferential resource diffusion and interlayer correlation on epidemic phase transitions.
Findings
Preferential resource diffusion can alter phase transition types.
An optimal resource strategy maximizes disease suppression.
Phase transition behavior depends on interlayer correlation.
Abstract
Resource diffusion is an ubiquitous phenomenon, but how it impacts epidemic spreading has received little study. We propose a model that couples epidemic spreading and resource diffusion in multiplex networks. The spread of disease in a physical contact layer and the recovery of the infected nodes are both strongly dependent upon resources supplied by their counterparts in the social layer. The generation and diffusion of resources in the social layer are in turn strongly dependent upon the state of the nodes in the physical contact layer. Resources diffuse preferentially or randomly in this model. To quantify the degree of preferential diffusion, a bias parameter that controls the resource diffusion is proposed. We conduct extensive simulations and find that the preferential resource diffusion can change phase transition type of the fraction of infected nodes. When the degree of…
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