The concept that each person on the planet is just six handshakes removed from every other person has frightening implications
Published:
2 June 2003 y., Monday
The concept that each person on the planet is just six handshakes removed from every other person has frightening implications when it comes to a highly communicable disease like SARS.
Yet the "small world" effect, also known as the "six degrees of separation" phenomenon, may also help explain how severe acute respiratory syndrome has spread so rapidly around the globe, some researchers believe. The disease has infected 8,221 people and killed 735 worldwide, according to the World Health.
Physicists, psychologists and mathematicians who study network effects, the scientific field that the six-degrees-of-separation notion has engendered, are busy creating mathematical models that attempt to explain the quick spread of SARS.
Mathematicians have long used equations to examine the spread of epidemics, and to help public health officials control them. A recent paper in Science applied these methods to SARS.
In the Science article, the researchers assume that most people -- excluding those who come in contact with so-called superspreaders, have about the same chance of developing SARS. Superspreaders, researchers believe, have the ability to infect more people than most patients.
Network science, on the other hand, assumes that each person's social habits can increase or lessen his or her chances of getting infected. For example, one might be much more likely to come into contact with someone with SARS by traveling on a plane to Taiwan, a country that has recently seen a high rate of SARS infections.
Šaltinis:
wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
MEPs last week backed a new report for food labelling that clarifies the origin of food and where it is processed.
more »
Mental health problems can affect our “daily life, family, school, work and leisure” and early diagnosis and treatment is the best way to avert personal catastrophe, according to Greek Socialist Evangelia Tzampazi, who is preparing a report on the subject.
more »
In 2003, EU health ministers advised governments to put in place large-scale screening programmes for people at a higher risk of cancer because of generic factors like age and gender.
more »
Parliament will today debate new measures to make sure that cancer causing pesticides are banned from going on sale whilst also ensuring that the amounts of current pesticides used are greatly reduced.
more »
Vets across India's West Bengal state are carrying out a mass cull of birds after a fresh outbreak of avian flu.
more »
Roy Carter - the retired British postman - is game for anything after his damaged knuckles were replaced with ones made from a similar material used to line atomic reactors.
more »
Begun only one month ago, stressed out passers-by dish out about two dollars to smash a cup or saucer and relieve their anxieties to the encouragement of staff.
more »
MEPs adopted the toy safety proposal with 481 votes in favour, 73 against, 40 abstentions.
more »
Dairy farmers in some parts of India are getting a boost from a new line of business - cow urine.
more »
The commission has tabled proposals to improve how the European pharmaceutical market operates and ensure that patients benefit from safe, innovative and accessible medicines.
more »