When ideas go viral -- complex bifurcations in a two-stage transmission model
Julian Heidecke, Maria Vittoria Barbarossa

TL;DR
This paper analyzes a complex two-stage contagion model inspired by epidemiology and social dynamics, revealing rich behaviors like coexistence, bistability, and bifurcations that surpass classical models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-stage transmission model with nonlinear contagion and population renewal, providing new insights into complex dynamical behaviors.
Findings
Rich dynamics including coexistence and bistability
Numerous bifurcations in parameter space
Complex behaviors exceeding classical models
Abstract
We consider the qualitative behavior of a mathematical model for transmission dynamics with two nonlinear stages of contagion. The proposed model is inspired by phenomena occurring in epidemiology (spread of infectious diseases) or social dynamics (spread of opinions, behaviors, ideas), and described by a compartmental approach. Upon contact with a promoter (contagious individual), a naive (susceptible) person can either become promoter himself or become , hence more vulnerable. Weakened individuals become contagious when they experience a second contact with members of the promoter group. After a certain time in the contagious compartment, individuals become inactive (are insusceptible and cannot spread) and are removed from the chain of transmission. We combine this two-stage contagion process with renewal of the naive population, modeled by means of transitions…
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