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E-raamat: Handbook of Infectious Disease Data Analysis

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (University of Munich, Munich, Germany), Edited by
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Recent years have seen an explosion in new kinds of data on infectious diseases, including data on social contacts, whole genome sequences of pathogens, biomarkers for susceptibility to infection, serological panel data, and surveillance data. The Handbook of Infectious Disease Data Analysis provides an overview of many key statistical methods that have been developed in response to such new data streams and the associated ability to address key scientific and epidemiological questions. A unique feature of the Handbook is the wide range of topics covered. Key featuresContributors include many leading researchers in the fieldDivided into four main sections: Basic concepts, Analysis of Outbreak Data, Analysis of Seroprevalence Data, Analysis of Surveillance DataNumerous case studies and examples throughoutProvides both introductory material and key reference materialLeonhard Held is Professor of Biostatistics at the University of Zurich.Niel Hens is Professor of Biostatistics at Hasselt University and the University of Antwerp.Philip O’Neill is Professor of Applied Probability at the University of Nottingham.Jacco Wallinga is Professor of Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases at the Leiden University Medical Center.

Arvustused

"One of the editors of the book, Jacco Wallinga, is heading the group at the Dutch Institute of Public Health and the Environment that does all of the statistical analyses to feed their director with information. The latter has had a strong influence on the policy our government chose . . . The book is well produced . . . " ~Paul Eilers, ISCB News

Editors vii
Contributors ix
I Introduction
1(10)
1 Introduction
3(8)
Leonhard Held
Niel Hens
Philip D. O'Neill
Jacco Wallinga
II Basic Concepts
11(146)
2 Population Dynamics of Pathogens
13(24)
Ottar N. Bjørnstad
3 Infectious Disease Data from Surveillance, Outbreak Investigation, and Epidemiological Studies
37(20)
Susan Hahne
Richard Pebody
4 Key Concepts in Infectious Disease Epidemiology
57(10)
Nicholas P. Jewell
5 Key Parameters in Infectious Disease Epidemiology
67(26)
Laura F. White
6 Contact Patterns for Contagious Diseases
93(18)
Jacco Wallinga
Jan van de Kassteele
Niel Hens
7 Basic Stochastic Transmission Models and Their Inference
111(18)
Tom Britton
8 Analysis of Vaccine Studies and Causal Inference
129(28)
M. Elizabeth Halloran
III Analysis of Outbreak Data
157(108)
9 Markov Chain Monte Carlo Methods for Outbreak Data
159(20)
Philip D. O'Neill
Theodore Kypraios
10 Approximate Bayesian Computation Methods for Epidemic Models
179(20)
Peter J. Neal
11 Iterated Filtering Methods for Markov Process Epidemic Models
199(22)
Theresa Stocks
12 Pairwise Survival Analysis of Infectious Disease Transmission Data
221(24)
Eben Kenah
13 Methods for Outbreaks Using Genomic Data
245(20)
Don Klinkenberg
Caroline Colijn
Xavier Didelot
IV Analysis of Seroprevalence Data
265(120)
14 Persistence of Passive Immunity, Natural Immunity (and Vaccination)
267(20)
Amy K. Winter
C. Jessica
E. Metcalf
15 Inferring the Time of Infection from Serological Data
287(18)
Maciej F. Boni
Kare Mølbak
Karen A. Krogfelt
16 The Use of Seroprevalence Data to Estimate Cumulative Incidence of Infection
305(10)
Benjamin J. Cowling
Jessica Y. Wong
17 The Analysis of Serological Data with Transmission Models
315(20)
Marc Baguelin
18 The Analysis of Multivariate Serological Data
335(26)
Steven Abrams
19 Mixture Modeling
361(24)
Emanuele Del Fava
Ziv Shkedy
V Analysis of Surveillance Data
385(158)
20 Modeling Infectious Disease Distributions: Applications of Point Process Methods
387(24)
Peter J. Diggle
21 Prospective Detection of Outbreaks
411(26)
Benjamin Allevius
Michael Hohle
22 Underreporting and Reporting Delays
437(18)
Angela Noufaily
23 Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Surveillance Data
455(22)
Jon Wakefield
Tracy Qi Dong
Vladimir N. Minin
24 Analysing Multiple Epidemic Data Sources
477(32)
Daniela De Angelis
Anne M. Presanis
25 Forecasting Based on Surveillance Data
509(20)
Leonhard Held
Sebastian Meyer
26 Spatial Mapping of Infectious Disease Risk
529(14)
Ewan Cameron
Index 543
Leonhard Held is Professor of Biostatistics at the University of Zurich.

Niel Hens is Professor of Biostatistics at Hasselt University and the University of Antwerp.

Philip ONeill is Professor of Applied Probability at the University of Nottingham.

Jacco Wallinga is Professor of Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases at the Leiden University Medical Center.