Discovering Spatio-Temporal Models of the Spread of West Nile Virus |
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Authors: | Jennifer Orme-Zavaleta Jane Jorgensen Bruce D'Ambrosio Eric Altendorf Philippe A. Rossignol |
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Affiliation: | Western Ecology Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Corvallis, OR 97333, USA. orme-zavaleta.jennifer@epa.gov |
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Abstract: | Emerging infectious diseases are characterized by complex interactions among disease agents, vectors, wildlife, humans, and the environment. Since the appearance of West Nile virus (WNV) in New York City in 1999, it has infected over 8,000 people in the United States, resulting in several hundred deaths in 46 contiguous states. The virus is transmitted by mosquitoes and maintained in various bird reservoir hosts. Its unexpected introduction, high morbidity, and rapid spread have left public health agencies facing severe time constraints in a theory-poor environment, dependent largely on observational data collected by independent survey efforts and much uncertainty. Current knowledge may be expressed as a priori constraints on models learned from data. Accordingly, we applied a Bayesian probabilistic relational approach to generate spatially and temporally linked models from heterogeneous data sources. Using data collected from multiple independent sources in Maryland, we discovered the integrated context in which infected birds are plausible indicators for positive mosquito pools and human cases for 2001 and 2002. |
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Keywords: | Community model infectious disease integrated risk analysis probabilistic relational model West Nile virus |
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