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Network analysis of population flow among major cities and its influence on COVID-19 transmission in China.

Authors :
Liu, Jie
Hao, Jingyu
Sun, Yuyu
Shi, Zhenwu
Source :
Cities. May2021, Vol. 112, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Large-scale and diffuse population flow amplifies the localized COVID-19 outbreak into a widespread pandemic. Network analysis provides a new methodology to uncover the topology and evolution of the population flow and understand its influence on the early dynamics of COVID-19 transmission. In this paper, we simulated 42 transmission scenarios to show the distribution of the COVID-19 outbreak across China. We predicted some original (Guangzhou, Shanghai, Shenzhen) had higher total aggregate population outflows than Wuhan, indicating larger spread scopes and faster growth rates of COVID-19 outbreak. We built an importation risk model to identify some major cities (Dongguan and Foshan) with the highest total importation risk values and the highest standard deviations, indicating the core transmission chains (Dongguan-Shenzhen, Foshan-Guangzhou). We built the population flow networks to analyze their Spatio-temporal characteristics and identify the influential sub-groups and spreaders. By removing different influential spreaders, we identified Guangzhou can most influence the network's topological characteristics, and some major cities' degree centrality was significantly decreased. Our findings quantified the effectiveness of travel restrictions on delaying the epidemic growth and limiting the spread scope of COVID-19 in China, which helped better derive the geographical COVID-19 transmission related to population flow networks' structural features. • 42 transmission scenarios were simulated to test contribution of different original epicenters to seeding COVID-19 in China. • An importation risk model was built to test contribution of population flow among multiple epicenters to spreading COVID-19. • A population flow network was built to capture evolution of COVID-19 transmission and identify influential spreaders. • This paper quantified the effectiveness of travel restrictions on reducing the numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02642751
Volume :
112
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cities
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149367331
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2021.103138