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Complex Systems Seminar: Bertrand Ottino-Loffler: "The Evolutionary Dynamics of Incubation Periods"

Thursday, February 27, 2025 | 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM CT
Technological Institute, F160, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208 map it

The incubation period for typhoid, polio, measles, leukemia and many other diseases follows a right-skewed, approximately lognormal distribution. Although this pattern was discovered more than sixty years ago, it remains an open question to explain its ubiquity. Here, we propose an explanation based on evolutionary dynamics on graphs. For simple models of a mutant or pathogen invading a network-structured population of healthy cells, we show that skewed distributions of incubation periods emerge for a wide range of assumptions about invader fitness, competition dynamics, and network structure. The skewness stems from stochastic mechanisms associated with two classic problems in probability theory: the coupon collector and the random walk. Unlike previous explanations that rely crucially on heterogeneity, our results hold even for homogeneous populations. Thus, we predict that two equally healthy individuals subjected to equal doses of equally pathogenic agents may, by chance alone, show remarkably different time courses of disease.

Bertrand Ottino-Loffler, Independant Fellow, Rockefeller University

Host: Istvan Kovacs

Audience

  • Faculty/Staff
  • Student
  • Post Docs/Docs
  • Graduate Students

Contact

Joan West
(847) 491-3645
Email

Interest

  • Academic (general)

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