PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Can you predict how a disease will spread in a population?

2013-02-05
(Press-News.org) How, when and where a pathogen is transmitted between two individuals in a population is crucial in understanding and predicting how a disease will spread. New research has laid the foundation for a new generation of zoonotic disease spreading models, which could allow for more targeted prevention strategies.

By using novel complexity sciences tools the study, published in Physical Review Letters, outlines a predictive model of a spatial epidemic spread in a population of territorial animals.

By quantifying the instances of transmission events, the research team, Dr Luca Giuggioli, Senior Lecturer in Complexity Sciences in the Department of Engineering Mathematics and the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Bristol, and Dr David Sanders and Master's student, Sebastian Pérez-Becker, from UNAM, Mexico, have determined the propagation speed of a pathogen based on the knowledge of the demography of a species, the way animals wander and the degree of contagiousness of the disease.

As a large percentage of new and remerging human infectious diseases are of animal origin, models that track how pathogens hop from one animal host to another will help develop more effective control measures that are capable of identifying specific individuals or class of individuals rather than ineffective and costly widespread culling procedures of an entire population.

Dr Giuggioli said: "The research findings have the potential to be applicable to various populations of territorial animals worldwide including in the UK bovine Tb in badgers, which has enormous economic implications for the cattle industry."

Bovine tuberculosis (Tb) in badgers, which affects cattle, the farming industry and has become a political issue, is an example of how the model could be used. Badgers are territorial animals and do transmit the infection by passing the bacterial pathogen to individuals in neighbouring territories, which is what the researchers have quantified in their model.

### The research was funded by a grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico.

Paper: Encounter times in overlapping domains: application to epidemic spread in a population of territorial animals, Luca Giuggioli, Sebastian Pérez-Becker and David P. Sanders, Physical Review Letters, published 30 January 2013.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Intense rain in the Ebro basin is becoming more and more uncommon

Intense rain in the Ebro basin is becoming more and more uncommon
2013-02-05
Researchers from CSIC's Aula Dei Experimental Station in Zaragoza, Spain have confirmed that the frequency of intense rainfall has been decreasing in the Ebro basin since 1955. Despite what it may seem, intense rain is becoming rarer in the Ebro basin according to two studies carried out by Spanish researchers from the Department of Soil and Water of CSIC's Aula Dei Experimental Station in Zaragoza. Their results have been published in the 'Journal of Hydrology' and the 'Hydrology and Earth System Sciences' journal. Santiago Beguería, one of the authors of both studies, ...

Social scientists propose integrated information systems for smarter health and social care

2013-02-05
A new ESF position paper calls for increasing use of ICT to deliver health and social care services. A new position paper, Developing a New Understanding of Enabling Health and Wellbeing in Europe, published today by the European Science Foundation, highlights the need for change in health and social care across Europe. As social care and informal care are essential to improving health and preventing health problems, especially in an ageing population, there are still large gaps of knowledge in how best to organise this, and how best to combine it with health care. ...

Newly discovered plant structure may lead to improved biofuel processing

2013-02-05
Athens, Ga. – When Li Tan approached his colleagues at the University of Georgia with some unusual data he had collected, they initially seemed convinced that his experiment had become contaminated; what he was seeing simply didn't make any sense. Tan was examining some of the sugars, proteins and polymers that make up plant cell walls, which provide the structural support and protection that allow plants to grow. Yet his samples contained a mixture of sugars that should not be present in the same structure. However, Tan was convinced that his samples were pure so ...

A spiral galaxy with a secret

A spiral galaxy with a secret
2013-02-05
Despite its appearance, which looks much like countless other galaxies, Messier 106 hides a number of secrets. Thanks to this image, which combines data from Hubble with observations by amateur astronomers Robert Gendler and Jay GaBany, they are revealed as never before. At its heart, as in most spiral galaxies, is a supermassive black hole, but this one is particularly active. Unlike the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way, which pulls in wisps of gas only occasionally, Messier 106's black hole is actively gobbling up material. As the gas spirals towards the black ...

Kaiser Permanente's anti-obesity interventions in schools show signs of success

2013-02-05
OAKLAND, Calif., February 5, 2013 – Community-based efforts to change the environment are proving to be an effective way of encouraging more physical activity and nutrition among school-age children, according to findings announced today from Kaiser Permanente. Researchers examined a series of Kaiser Permanente community-based obesity prevention interventions in adults and children and found that the more effective obesity prevention interventions were those that were "high dose" – reaching large populations with greater strength – and those that focused specifically on ...

21 minutes to marital satisfaction

2013-02-05
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Marital satisfaction -- so critical to health and happiness – generally declines over time. A brief writing intervention that helps spouses adopt a more objective outlook on marital conflict could be the answer. New Northwestern University research shows that this writing intervention, implemented through just three, seven-minute writing exercises administered online, prevents couples from losing that loving feeling. "I don't want it to sound like magic, but you can get pretty impressive results with minimal intervention," said Eli Finkel, lead author ...

Achilles heel: Popular drug-carrying nanoparticles get trapped in bloodstream

2013-02-05
ANN ARBOR—Many medically minded researchers are in hot pursuit of designs that will allow drug-carrying nanoparticles to navigate tissues and the interiors of cells, but University of Michigan engineers have discovered that these particles have another hurdle to overcome: escaping the bloodstream. Drug delivery systems promise precision targeting of diseased tissue, meaning that medicines could be more effective at lower doses and with fewer side effects. Such an approach could treat plaques in arteries, which can lead to heart attacks or strokes. Drug carriers would ...

Biologists map rare case of fitness-reducing interaction in nuclear, mitochondrial DNA

Biologists map rare case of fitness-reducing interaction in nuclear, mitochondrial DNA
2013-02-05
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- A team of biologists from Indiana University and Brown University believes it has discovered the mechanism by which interacting mutations in mitochondrial and nuclear DNA produce an incompatible genotype that reduces reproductive fitness and delays development in fruit flies. The new research, led by IU biologists Kristi Montooth and Colin Meiklejohn and including former IU undergraduate researcher Mo Siddiq, describes the cause and consequences of an interaction between the two genomes that co-exist within eukaryotic cells. Animal mitochondrial ...

EARTH: Moon could have formed from Earth after all

2013-02-05
Alexandria, VA –Scientists are revisiting the age-old question of how Earth's moon formed with the development of two new models that work out the complicated physics of planetary collisions. The idea of a moon-forming collision is not new: The Giant Impact Theory put forth in the 1970s suggested that the moon resulted from a collision with a protoplanet approximately half the size of ancient Earth. But the physics underlying such a collision implied that the moon should be made up of debris mostly from the protoplanet. Since then we've discovered the moon is instead very ...

Mitochondrial mutations: When the cell's 2 genomes collide

Mitochondrial mutations: When the cells 2 genomes collide
2013-02-05
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Diseases from a mutation in one genome are complicated enough, but some illnesses arise from errant interactions between two genomes: the DNA in the nucleus and in the mitochondria. Scientists want to know more about how such genomic disconnects cause disease. In a step in that direction, scientists at Brown University and Indiana University have traced one such incompatibility in fruit flies down to the level of individual nucleotide mutations and describe how the genetic double whammy makes the flies sick. "This has relevance to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Parts of the brain that are needed to remember words identified

Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia

Sharing mealtimes with others linked to better wellbeing

New DESI results: Evidence mounts for evolving dark energy

New DESI results strengthen hints that dark energy may evolve

DESI opens access to the largest 3D map of the universe yet

New study reveals high levels of fusarium mycotoxins in seized cannabis from Arizona and California

Sleepier during the day? For some older people, it’s linked to twice the dementia risk

Is increased sleepiness in our 80s tied to higher dementia risk?

South Africa and China establish record-breaking 12,900 km ultra-secure quantum satellite link

A rule-changer for ceramic fuel cells

Good vibrations: Scientists discover a groundbreaking method for exciting phonon-polaritons

CNIC scientists discover a type of immune cell that produces defensive "shields" in the skin

Science behind “Polly want a cracker” could guide future treatment design for speech disorders

Brain imaging reveals surprises about learning

Scientists see the first steps of DNA unwinding

Earliest stages and possible new cause of stomach cancer revealed

Unique cell shape keeps lymphatic vessels and plant leaves stable

New understanding of B cell mutation strategies could have implications for vaccines

Sea level rise after the last ice age: More knowledge

New mechanism behind adaptive immunity revealed. It could impact how we design vaccines.

Hyperuricemia: Current state and prospects

What happens in the male mouse brain during sex

Prescription stimulant use, misuse, and use disorder among US adults ages 18 to 64

Suicide and self-harm events with GLP-1 receptor agonists in adults with diabetes or obesity

Pregnancy irreversibly remodels the mouse intestine

Blocking gut cannabinoids may prevent leaky gut

Plant patch can detect stress signals in real time

NFL’s Buffalo Bills continue CPR education kicking off year 3 of the HeartBEAT initiative

Team finds regional, age-related trends in exposure to drug-resistant pathogen

[Press-News.org] Can you predict how a disease will spread in a population?