Paper List
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Evolutionarily Stable Stackelberg Equilibrium
通过要求追随者策略对突变入侵具有鲁棒性,弥合了斯塔克尔伯格领导力模型与演化稳定性之间的鸿沟。
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Recovering Sparse Neural Connectivity from Partial Measurements: A Covariance-Based Approach with Granger-Causality Refinement
通过跨多个实验会话累积协方差统计,实现从部分记录到完整神经连接性的重建。
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Atomic Trajectory Modeling with State Space Models for Biomolecular Dynamics
ATMOS通过提供一个基于SSM的高效框架,用于生物分子的原子级轨迹生成,弥合了计算昂贵的MD模拟与时间受限的深度生成模型之间的差距。
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Slow evolution towards generalism in a model of variable dietary range
通过证明是种群统计噪声(而非确定性动力学)驱动了模式形成和泛化食性的演化,解决了间接竞争下物种形成的悖论。
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Grounded Multimodal Retrieval-Augmented Drafting of Radiology Impressions Using Case-Based Similarity Search
通过将印象草稿基于检索到的历史病例,并采用明确引用和基于置信度的拒绝机制,解决放射学报告生成中的幻觉问题。
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Unified Policy–Value Decomposition for Rapid Adaptation
通过双线性分解在策略和价值函数之间共享低维目标嵌入,实现对新颖任务的零样本适应。
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Mathematical Modeling of Cancer–Bacterial Therapy: Analysis and Numerical Simulation via Physics-Informed Neural Networks
提供了一个严格的、无网格的PINN框架,用于模拟和分析细菌癌症疗法中复杂的、空间异质的相互作用。
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Sample-Efficient Adaptation of Drug-Response Models to Patient Tumors under Strong Biological Domain Shift
通过从无标记分子谱中学习可迁移表征,利用最少的临床数据实现患者药物反应的有效预测。
Household Bubbling Strategies for Epidemic Control and Social Connectivity
Departamento de Física, FCEyN, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, Argentina | Instituto de Investigaciones Físicas de Mar del Plata (IFIMAR), CONICET, Argentina
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of designing household merging (social bubble) strategies that effectively control epidemic risk while maximizing social connectivity and psychological well-being during lockdowns.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a novel household merging criterion based on the number of economically active (working) members, moving beyond traditional criteria like household size or age composition.
- Methodology Develops a mathematical network model integrating real-world demographic data (from Argentina, China, Israel, Spain) with household structure, labor activity, and explicit SIR epidemic dynamics.
- Theory Derives analytical expressions for the epidemic threshold using generating functions, explicitly linking it to heterogeneity in worker connectivity (⟨k_E²⟩ - ⟨k_E⟩) and variability in workers per household (⟨w²⟩ - ⟨w⟩).
主要结论
- Merging strategies based on the number of working members can maintain epidemic risk at levels comparable to those based on household size, as shown by similar critical thresholds (β_c^E) in simulations.
- The worker-based approach enables a significantly larger portion of the population (exceeding 40% in some countries) to form larger social bubbles, directly addressing isolation and loneliness.
- The strategy of merging households with at most one worker (w* = 1) provides the optimal trade-off, maximizing social connectivity (increasing ⟨ℓ_I⟩) while keeping the epidemic risk effectively controlled across all studied countries.
摘要: During the COVID-19 crisis, policymakers have implemented "social bubble" merging strategies, which allowed people from different households to meet and interact. Although these measures can mitigate the negative effects of extreme isolation, they also introduce additional contacts that may facilitate disease spread. As a result, several modeling studies have explored the epidemiological impact of different household-merging strategies, in which the selection of households to be merged is guided by specific demographic criteria, such as household size or the age composition of their members. Here, we investigate an alternative pairing strategy in which households are merged according to the number of economically active (working) members. We develop a mathematical model of household networks using real demographic data from multiple regions around the world, and simulate a lockdown scenario in which only economically active individuals can leave their households, while the remaining non-working members stay indoors. By using numerical simulations and the generating function technique, we then estimate the epidemic risk for different household merging strategies. We found that merging strategies based on the number of working members can keep epidemic risk at similar levels as those based on household size. Moreover, the worker-based approach allows significantly more people to form larger social bubbles, exceeding 40% of the population in some countries. We found that merging households with at most one worker provides the best balance between controlling epidemic risk and addressing people’s need for social contact.