54 research outputs found

    Undergraduate Research in Mathematical Biology Needs a CURE

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    Impact of COVID-19 on Disaggregate Consumption and Online Retail Sales: Evidence from the USA

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    This study applies the difference-in-difference technique to analyze the consumption pattern during COVID-19 against pre-COVID-19 years. We analyze the online retail sales before and after COVID-19 using time series and linear regression models. Time series intervention analysis results suggest that COVID-19 has caused a statistically significant change in the mean level of online retail sales share in e-commerce. Using a difference-in-difference approach, we find a 4% decrease in aggregate consumption from March to December 2020 compared to the benchmark period although statistically insignificant. Further, using a fixed effects model with time dummies, we find a nearly 8% significant decrease in March–April and a 2% decrease in May–June, which is not significant maybe because the lockdown restrictions were lifted during that time. We infer that the aggregate consumption decreased during the strictest months of lockdown and COVID-19 had a heterogeneous impact across categories of consumption

    Natural Selection at Work: An Accelerated Evolutionary Computing Approach to Predictive Model Selection

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    We implement genetic algorithm based predictive model building as an alternative to the traditional stepwise regression. We then employ the Information Complexity Measure (ICOMP) as a measure of model fitness instead of the commonly used measure of R-square. Furthermore, we propose some modifications to the genetic algorithm to increase the overall efficiency

    A Study of COVID-19 Mortality Under Varying Patient Frailty

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    For this study, we modeled the spread and mortality of COVID-19 throughout the city of Chicago. By incorporating group frailty into a classic SEIR infectious disease model, we were able to differentiate the population of Chicago by their response to COVID-19. Three age groups with different COVID-19-induced death rates were examined, and the model sought to showcase the multiplicative deviation of each age group death rate from the average disease-induced death rate. This adjustment for different death rates among age groups accounted for heterogeneity within the population, and sought to introduce a more accurate manner for modeling the spread of infectious diseases
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