Physical Society Colloquium
Digital Herd Immunity
Department of Physics Princeton University
A population can be immune to epidemics even if not all of its individual
members are immune to the disease, just as long as sufficiently many are immune
— this is the traditional notion of herd immunity. In the smartphone era
a population can be immune to epidemics even if not a single one of its members
is immune to the disease — a notion we propose to call “digital
herd immunity”, which is similarly an emergent characteristic of
the population. This immunity arises because contact-tracing protocols based on
smartphone capabilities can lead to highly efficient quarantining of infected
population members and thus the extinguishing of nascent epidemics. When the
disease characteristics are favorable and smartphone usage is high enough,
the population is in this immune phase. As usage decreases there is a novel
“contact tracing” phase transition to an epidemic
phase. I will discuss a “Reed-Frost” model for COVID-19
which shows that digital immunity is possible regardless of the proportion
of non-symptomatic transmission. I will also comment on the history of such
efforts in combating COVID-19 to date.
Livestream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_3o3LXk4w4
Friday, October 16th 2020, 15:30
Tele-colloquium
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