scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

High-resolution measurements of face-to-face contact patterns in a primary school.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The results can help define a prioritization of control measures based on preventive measures, case isolation, classes and school closures, that could reduce the disruption to education during epidemics.
Abstract
Little quantitative information is available on the mixing patterns of children in school environments. Describing and understanding contacts between children at school would help quantify the transmission opportunities of respiratory infections and identify situations within schools where the risk of transmission is higher. We report on measurements carried out in a French school (6-12 years children), where we collected data on the time-resolved face-to-face proximity of children and teachers using a proximity-sensing infrastructure based on radio frequency identification devices. Data on face-to-face interactions were collected on Thursday, October 1st and Friday, October 2nd 2009. We recorded 77,602 contact events between 242 individuals (232 children and 10 teachers). In this setting, each child has on average 323 contacts per day with 47 other children, leading to an average daily interaction time of 176 minutes. Most contacts are brief, but long contacts are also observed. Contacts occur mostly within each class, and each child spends on average three times more time in contact with classmates than with children of other classes. We describe the temporal evolution of the contact network and the trajectories followed by the children in the school, which constrain the contact patterns. We determine an exposure matrix aimed at informing mathematical models. This matrix exhibits a class and age structure which is very different from the homogeneous mixing hypothesis. We report on important properties of the contact patterns between school children that are relevant for modeling the propagation of diseases and for evaluating control measures. We discuss public health implications related to the management of schools in case of epidemics and pandemics. Our results can help define a prioritization of control measures based on preventive measures, case isolation, classes and school closures, that could reduce the disruption to education during epidemics.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Temporal Networks

TL;DR: This review presents the emergent field of temporal networks, and discusses methods for analyzing topological and temporal structure and models for elucidating their relation to the behavior of dynamical systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical physics of vaccination

TL;DR: This report reviews the developmental arc of theoretical epidemiology with emphasis on vaccination, as it led from classical models assuming homogeneously mixing populations and ignoring human behavior, to recent models that account for behavioral feedback and/or population spatial/social structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Projecting social contact matrices in 152 countries using contact surveys and demographic data.

TL;DR: Estimates of mixing patterns for societies for which contact data such as POLYMOD are not yet available are provided, finding contact patterns are highly assortative with age across all countries considered, but pronounced regional differences in the age-specific contacts at home were noticeable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modern temporal network theory: a colloquium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of methods to analyze and model temporal networks and processes taking place on them, focusing mainly on the last three years, including spreading of infectious disease, opinions, rumors, in social networks; information packets in computer networks; various types of signaling in biology, and more.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modern temporal network theory: A colloquium

TL;DR: This colloquium reviews the methods to analyze and model temporal networks and processes taking place on them, focusing mainly on the last three years, which includes the spreading of infectious disease, opinions, rumors, in social networks; information packets in computer networks; various types of signaling in biology, and more.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Birds of a Feather: Homophily in Social Networks

TL;DR: The homophily principle as mentioned in this paper states that similarity breeds connection, and that people's personal networks are homogeneous with regard to many sociodemographic, behavioral, and intrapersonal characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reality mining: sensing complex social systems

TL;DR: The ability to use standard Bluetooth-enabled mobile telephones to measure information access and use in different contexts, recognize social patterns in daily user activity, infer relationships, identify socially significant locations, and model organizational rhythms is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social contacts and mixing patterns relevant to the spread of infectious diseases.

TL;DR: This study provides the first large-scale quantitative approach to contact patterns relevant for infections transmitted by the respiratory or close-contact route, and the results should lead to improved parameterisation of mathematical models used to design control strategies.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Pocket switched networks and human mobility in conference environments

TL;DR: An experiment measuring forty-one humans' mobility is presented, in exhibiting a power-law distrbution for the time between node contacts, and the implications on the design of forwarding algorithms for PSN are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

What's in a crowd? Analysis of face-to-face behavioral networks

TL;DR: Data on the time-resolved face-to-face proximity of individuals in large-scale real-world scenarios is analyzed to investigate the dynamics of a susceptible-infected model for epidemic spreading that unfolds on the dynamical networks of human proximity.
Related Papers (5)