2007
DOI: 10.1080/00480169.2007.36782
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A comparison of predictions made by three simulation models of foot-and-mouth disease

Abstract: Relative validation is one of a number of steps that can be undertaken to increase end-user confidence in predictions made by infectious disease models.

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Cited by 43 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…The literature on FMD control provides myriad examples, including the number of livestock slaughtered (Durand and Mahul, 2000), number of infected farms on which animals are culled (Schoenbaum and Disney, 2003), the number of farms where animals are pre-emptively slaughtered (Velthuis and Mourits, 2007), export losses from trade bans (Paarlberg et al, 2008), livestock slaughter compensation costs (Sanson et al, 2014), total number of farms vaccinated (Tildesley et al, 2006), spatial area of the outbreak (Dubé et al, 2007), and outbreak duration (Morris et al, 2001). In choosing any particular metric to compare control actions, a statement is implicitly being made about the objective of management.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The literature on FMD control provides myriad examples, including the number of livestock slaughtered (Durand and Mahul, 2000), number of infected farms on which animals are culled (Schoenbaum and Disney, 2003), the number of farms where animals are pre-emptively slaughtered (Velthuis and Mourits, 2007), export losses from trade bans (Paarlberg et al, 2008), livestock slaughter compensation costs (Sanson et al, 2014), total number of farms vaccinated (Tildesley et al, 2006), spatial area of the outbreak (Dubé et al, 2007), and outbreak duration (Morris et al, 2001). In choosing any particular metric to compare control actions, a statement is implicitly being made about the objective of management.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For outbreak duration, a number of statistics have been used in the literature for summarising this metric such as the average time until disease eradication (Morris et al, 2001), the median outbreak duration (Roche et al, 2014a), the probability of disease eradication within 200 days (Morris et al, 2001), the 95 th percentile of outbreak duration (Velthuis and Mourits, 2007), and sophisticated comparisons of the whole distribution in outcome metrics (Dubé et al, 2007). These are all statistics of outbreak duration yet, as with the choice of metric, not all statistics of outbreak duration are positively correlated with one another and the choice of statistic will also influence which control action is recommended.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…If the models compared produce similar results, even if they were developed independently or with different methods, the confidence and credibility on the model increase. Some examples of docking have been presented in Dubé et al (2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, spatially explicit simulation models (9) have helped to quantify the relationship between farm density in the United Kingdom and transmissibility (10). Although similar approaches have been used to describe likely patterns of transmission in the United States (11), Australia (12), Korea (13), New Zealand (14), and the Netherlands (15), analysis of the 2001 United Kingdom outbreak benefits from an unusually rich dataset. Precise locations are available for both affected and unaffected farms; furthermore, the number of infected premises during 2001 was sufficient to permit accurate estimation of key transmission parameters.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%