BioWar: scalable agent-based model of bioattacks

KM Carley, DB Fridsma, E Casman… - … on Systems, Man …, 2006 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
KM Carley, DB Fridsma, E Casman, A Yahja, N Altman, LC Chen, B Kaminsky, D Nave
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics-Part A: Systems …, 2006ieeexplore.ieee.org
While structured by social and institutional networks, disease outbreaks are modulated by
physical, economical, technological, communication, health, and governmental
infrastructures. To systematically reason about the nature of outbreaks, the potential
outcomes of media, prophylaxis, and vaccination campaigns, and the relative value of
various early warning devices, social context, and infrastructure, must be considered.
Numerical models provide a cost-effective ethical system for reasoning about such events …
While structured by social and institutional networks, disease outbreaks are modulated by physical, economical, technological, communication, health, and governmental infrastructures. To systematically reason about the nature of outbreaks, the potential outcomes of media, prophylaxis, and vaccination campaigns, and the relative value of various early warning devices, social context, and infrastructure, must be considered. Numerical models provide a cost-effective ethical system for reasoning about such events. BioWar, a scalable citywide multiagent network numerical model, is described in this paper. BioWar simulates individuals as agents who are embedded in social, health, and professional networks and tracks the incidence of background and maliciously introduced diseases. In addition to epidemiology, BioWar simulates health-care-seeking behaviors, absenteeism patterns, and pharmaceutical purchases, information useful for syndromic and behavioral surveillance algorithms.
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