2012
DOI: 10.1515/1948-4690.1042
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Heterogeneity in Number and Type of Sexual Contacts in a Gay Urban Cohort

Abstract: HIV transmission models include heterogeneous individuals with different sexual behaviors including contact rates, mixing patterns, and sexual practices. However, heterogeneity can also exist within individuals over time. In this paper we analyze a two year prospective cohort of 882 gay men with observations at six month intervals focusing on heterogeneity both within and between individuals in sexual contact rates and sexual roles. The total number of sexual contacts made over the course of the study (mean 1.… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…23 Cohort data suggest that this type of risk dynamic may be more characteristic of certain populations, such as urban MSM. 69 …”
Section: Methods For Finding and Engaging Undiagnosed Personsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…23 Cohort data suggest that this type of risk dynamic may be more characteristic of certain populations, such as urban MSM. 69 …”
Section: Methods For Finding and Engaging Undiagnosed Personsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There exists growing evidence that contact rates too are heterogeneous within individuals over time (discussed in Romero-Severson et al [24]). The contact rate heterogeneity model that we use in this paper attempts to integrate heterogeneity at both the population level between individuals and at the individual level over time.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…., l . Justification for individuals having an intrinsic ideal degree comes from prior work on the emergence of “roles” within risk networks [Friedman et al, 1998, Curtis et al, 1995, Romero-Severson et al, 2012]. …”
Section: Modeling Network Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The parameter wjS controls the rate at which pj+t(v) approaches the limits asserted above, and so determines how closely individual nodes adhere to their ideal degree over the course of their network lifetimes. Justification for an individual seeking to maintain an intrinsic ideal degree comes from prior work on network “roles” and the correlations between role and ego network size [Friedman et al, 1998, Curtis et al, 1995, Romero-Severson et al, 2012]. …”
Section: Modeling Network Dynamismmentioning
confidence: 99%