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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Tracking Socioeconomic Vulnerability Using Network Analysis: Insights from an Avian Influenza Outbreak in an Ostrich Production Network

TLDR
The hypothesis that increasing economic efficiency in the domestic ostrich industry in South Africa made the system more vulnerable to outbreak of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (H5N2), and the results indicated that as time progressed, the network became increasingly vulnerable to pathogen outbreaks.
Abstract
Background: The focus of management in many complex systems is shifting towards facilitation, adaptation, building resilience, and reducing vulnerability. Resilience management requires the development and application of general heuristics and methods for tracking changes in both resilience and vulnerability. We explored the emergence of vulnerability in the South African domestic ostrich industry, an animal production system which typically involves 3-4 movements of each bird during its lifetime. This system has experienced several disease outbreaks, and the aim of this study was to investigate whether these movements have contributed to the vulnerability of this system to large disease outbreaks. Methodology/Principal Findings: The ostrich production system requires numerous movements of birds between different farm types associated with growth (i.e. Hatchery to juvenile rearing farm to adult rearing farm). We used 5 years of movement records between 2005 and 2011 prior to an outbreak of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (H5N2). These data were analyzed using a network analysis in which the farms were represented as nodes and the movements of birds as links. We tested the hypothesis that increasing economic efficiency in the domestic ostrich industry in South Africa made the system more vulnerable to outbreak of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (H5N2). Our results indicated that as time progressed, the network became increasingly vulnerable to pathogen outbreaks. The farms that became infected during the outbreak displayed network qualities, such as significantly higher connectivity and centrality, which predisposed them to be more vulnerable to disease outbreak. Conclusions/ Significance: Taken in the context of previous research, our results provide strong support for the application of network analysis to track vulnerability, while also providing useful practical implications for system monitoring and management.

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Modern Applied Statistics With S

TL;DR: The modern applied statistics with s is universally compatible with any devices to read, and is available in the digital library an online access to it is set as public so you can download it instantly.
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Unifying Research on Social–Ecological Resilience and Collapse

TL;DR: A unifying social-ecological framework based on a clear definition of system identity and the use of quantitative thresholds to define collapse is proposed, relating collapse processes to system structure and system structure influences the kind of collapse a system may experience.
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A symbolic network-based nonlinear theory for dynamical systems observability

TL;DR: The novelty of this paper is to identify from the symbolic Jacobian matrix the minimal set of variables (together with their time derivatives) candidate to be measured for completing the state space reconstruction and to compute the observability coefficients from a symbolic observability matrix.
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Susceptibility and status of avian influenza in ostriches

TL;DR: Ostriches maintain a low upper- to midtracheal temperature as part of their adaptive physiology for desert survival, which may explain the selection in ratites for E627K or its compensatory mutations—markers that facilitate AIV replication at lower temperatures.
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Measuring Resilience of Human–Spatial Systems to Disasters: Framework Combining Spatial-Network Analysis and Fisher Information

TL;DR: Improving urban resilience to disasters becomes well-recognized in both industry and academia, but resilience remains challenging to be operationalized, especially in complex urban contexts...
References
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BookDOI

Modern Applied Statistics with S

TL;DR: A guide to using S environments to perform statistical analyses providing both an introduction to the use of S and a course in modern statistical methods.

The igraph software package for complex network research

TL;DR: Platform-independent and open source igraph aims to satisfy all the requirements of a graph package while possibly remaining easy to use in interactive mode as well.
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Network biology: understanding the cell's functional organization

TL;DR: This work states that rapid advances in network biology indicate that cellular networks are governed by universal laws and offer a new conceptual framework that could potentially revolutionize the view of biology and disease pathologies in the twenty-first century.

R Development Core Team (2010): R: A language and environment for statistical computing

TL;DR: In this article, the R Foundation for Statistical Computing (RFC) gave permission to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.

Modern Applied Statistics With S

TL;DR: The modern applied statistics with s is universally compatible with any devices to read, and is available in the digital library an online access to it is set as public so you can download it instantly.
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