Control Strategies for COVID-19 Epidemic with Vaccination, Shield Immunity and Quarantine: A Metric Temporal Logic Approach
Zhe Xu, Bo Wu, Ufuk Topcu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a formal method using metric temporal logic to systematically synthesize control strategies for COVID-19 epidemic models, ensuring specified health outcomes are met through simulation-based case studies.
Contribution
It is the first to develop a systematic control synthesis approach for COVID-19 models with formal specifications expressed in metric temporal logic.
Findings
Control strategies can be synthesized to meet specified epidemic outcomes.
Early intervention significantly reduces infection spread.
More stringent specifications require increased control efforts.
Abstract
Ever since the outbreak of the COVID-19 epidemic, various public health control strategies have been proposed and tested against the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. We study three specific COVID-19 epidemic control models: the susceptible, exposed, infectious, recovered (SEIR) model with vaccination control; the SEIR model with shield immunity control; and the susceptible, un-quarantined infected, quarantined infected, confirmed infected (SUQC) model with quarantine control. We express the control requirement in metric temporal logic (MTL) formulas (a type of formal specification languages) which can specify the expected control outcomes such as "the deaths from the infection should never exceed one thousand per day within the next three months" or "the population immune from the disease should eventually exceed 200 thousand within the next 100 to 120 days". We then develop methods for…
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