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Equivalence and its invalidation between non-Markovian and Markovian spreading dynamics on complex networks

  • Mi Feng
  • , Shi Min Cai
  • , Ming Tang*
  • , Ying Cheng Lai
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • East China Normal University
  • University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
  • Arizona State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Epidemic spreading processes in the real world depend on human behaviors and, consequently, are typically non-Markovian in that the key events underlying the spreading dynamics cannot be described as a Poisson random process and the corresponding event time is not exponentially distributed. In contrast to Markovian type of spreading dynamics for which mathematical theories have been well developed, we lack a comprehensive framework to analyze and fully understand non-Markovian spreading processes. Here we develop a mean-field theory to address this challenge, and demonstrate that the theory enables accurate prediction of both the transient phase and the steady states of non-Markovian susceptible-infected-susceptible spreading dynamics on synthetic and empirical networks. We further find that the existence of equivalence between non-Markovian and Markovian spreading depends on a specific edge activation mechanism. In particular, when temporal correlations are absent on active edges, the equivalence can be expected; otherwise, an exact equivalence no longer holds.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3748
JournalNature Communications
Volume10
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2019

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