426 research outputs found
Some Applications of Bifurcation Formulae to the Period Maps of Delay Differential Equations
Our purpose is to present some applications of the bifurcation formulae derived in [13] for periodic delay differential equations. We prove that a sequence of Neimark-Sacker bifurcations occurs as the parameter increases. For some
special classes of equations, easily checkable conditions are given to determine the direction of the bifurcation of the time-one map
SEIR epidemiological model with varying infectivity and infinite delay
A new SEIR model with distributed infinite delay is derived when the infectivity depends on the age of infection. The basic reproduction number R-0, which is a threshold quantity for the stability of equilibria, is calculated. If R-0 1, then an endemic equilibrium appears which is locally asymptotically stable. Applying a permanence theorem for infinite dimensional systems, we obtain that the disease is always present when R-0 > 1
Controlling Mackey--Glass chaos
The Mackey--Glass equation, which was proposed to illustrate nonlinear
phenomena in physiological control systems, is a classical example of a simple
looking time delay system with very complicated behavior. Here we use a novel
approach for chaos control: we prove that with well chosen control parameters,
all solutions of the system can be forced into a domain where the feedback is
monotone, and by the powerful theory of delay differential equations with
monotone feedback we can guarantee that the system is not chaotic any more. We
show that this domain decomposition method is applicable with the most common
control terms. Furthermore, we propose an other chaos control scheme based on
state dependent delays.Comment: accepted in Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Scienc
Mathematical models for vaccination, waning immunity and immune system boosting: a general framework
When the body gets infected by a pathogen or receives a vaccine dose, the
immune system develops pathogen-specific immunity. Induced immunity decays in
time and years after recovery/vaccination the host might become susceptible
again. Exposure to the pathogen in the environment boosts the immune system
thus prolonging the duration of the protection. Such an interplay of within
host and population level dynamics poses significant challenges in rigorous
mathematical modeling of immuno-epidemiology. The aim of this paper is twofold.
First, we provide an overview of existing models for waning of
disease/vaccine-induced immunity and immune system boosting. Then a new
modeling approach is proposed for SIRVS dynamics, monitoring the immune status
of individuals and including both waning immunity and immune system boosting.
We show that some previous models can be considered as special cases or
approximations of our framework.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure keywords: Immuno-epidemiology, Waning immunity,
Immune status, Boosting, Physiological structure, Reinfection, Delay
equations, Vaccination. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1411.319
Large number of endemic equilibria for disease transmission models in patchy environment
We show that disease transmission models in a spatially heterogeneous
environment can have a large number of coexisting endemic equilibria. A general
compartmental model is considered to describe the spread of an infectious
disease in a population distributed over several patches. For disconnected
regions, many boundary equilibria may exist with mixed disease free and endemic
components, but these steady states usually disappear in the presence of
spatial dispersal. However, if backward bifurcations can occur in the regions,
some partially endemic equilibria of the disconnected system move into the
interior of the nonnegative cone and persist with the introduction of mobility
between the patches. We provide a mathematical procedure that precisely
describes in terms of the local reproduction numbers and the connectivity
network of the patches, whether a steady state of the disconnected system is
preserved or ceases to exist for low volumes of travel. Our results are
illustrated on a patchy HIV transmission model with subthreshold endemic
equilibria and backward bifurcation. We demonstrate the rich dynamical behavior
(i.e., creation and destruction of steady states) and the presence of multiple
stable endemic equilibria for various connection networks
Global dynamics of a novel delayed logistic equation arising from cell biology
The delayed logistic equation (also known as Hutchinson's equation or
Wright's equation) was originally introduced to explain oscillatory phenomena
in ecological dynamics. While it motivated the development of a large number of
mathematical tools in the study of nonlinear delay differential equations, it
also received criticism from modellers because of the lack of a mechanistic
biological derivation and interpretation. Here we propose a new delayed
logistic equation, which has clear biological underpinning coming from cell
population modelling. This nonlinear differential equation includes terms with
discrete and distributed delays. The global dynamics is completely described,
and it is proven that all feasible nontrivial solutions converge to the
positive equilibrium. The main tools of the proof rely on persistence theory,
comparison principles and an -perturbation technique. Using local
invariant manifolds, a unique heteroclinic orbit is constructed that connects
the unstable zero and the stable positive equilibrium, and we show that these
three complete orbits constitute the global attractor of the system. Despite
global attractivity, the dynamics is not trivial as we can observe long-lasting
transient oscillatory patterns of various shapes. We also discuss the
biological implications of these findings and their relations to other logistic
type models of growth with delays
- …