SYSYDSOCApr 22

On the dynamic behavior of the network SIRS epidemic model

arXiv:2604.2106540.61 citationsh-index: 1
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For researchers studying epidemic spread on networks, this work provides a rigorous theoretical foundation for SIRS models with heterogeneous parameters, extending prior results limited to rank-one or homogeneous settings.

The paper characterizes the global dynamics of the SIRS epidemic model on general deterministic networks, proving that the basic reproduction number R_0 determines stability and bifurcation behavior. It establishes global stability of the disease-free equilibrium when R_0 ≤ 1 and existence and stability of a unique endemic equilibrium when R_0 > 1, along with monotonicity properties and a convergent iterative algorithm.

We study the Suscectible-Infected-Recovered-Susceptible (SIRS) epidemic model on deterministic networks. For connected but otherwise general interaction patterns and heterogeneous recovery and loss-of-immunity rates, we identify a fundamental parameter R_0 (the basic reproduction number), which fully characterizes the qualitative dynamic behavior of the system. This parameter is the dominant eigenvalue of a rescaled version of the interaction matrix, whose rows are normalized by the corresponding recovery rates. We prove that a transcritical bifurcation occurs as R_0 crosses the threshold value 1. Specifically, we show that, if R_0 does not exceed 1, then the disease-free equilibrium is globally asymptotically stable, whereas, if R_0 is larger than 1, then the disease-free equilibrium is unstable and there exists a unique endemic equilibrium, which is asymptotically stable. As a byproduct of our analysis, we also identify key monotonicity properties of the dependence of the endemic equilibrium on the model parameters (the interaction matrix as well as the recovery rates and the loss-of-immunity rates) and obtain a distributed iterative algorithm for its computation, with provable convergence guarantees. Our results extend existing ones available in the literature for network SIRS epidemic models with rank-one interaction matrices and homogeneous recovery rates (including the single homogeneous population SIRS epidemic model).

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