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
The concept that each person on the planet is just six handshakes removed from every other person has frightening implications
more »
The World Health Organization, WHO, says it is starting a special fund to combat SARS, primarily in mainland China and Hong Kong
more »
European countries are to step up checks on air passengers arriving from countries affected by the Sars virus
more »
Kazakh Prime Minister during a government session on 29 April ordered that a special program of urgent measures be drawn up to prevent the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
more »
The secret to a long life
more »
Fear of SARS led to the headmistress of Harrogate Ladies’ College yesterday locking herself in a boarding house with 43 of her pupils
more »
Some of the starkest early reports about the deadly SARS pneumonia came not from health authorities, but from Internet discussions in which emergency-room physicians swapped details about the start of the epidemic
more »
Officials say 53 now have died; WHO experts study possible animal link to mystery disease
more »
The construction of the Yuri Gagarin Space Station would require 3-3.5 years
more »
Three Taiwan public health experts have traveled to mainland China to join their counterparts from other countries in surveying the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) there
more »