A model based on cellular automata for investigating the impact of lockdown, migration and vaccination on COVID-19 dynamics

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmpb.2021.106402Get rights and content

Highlights

  • New transition rules and neighbourhood schemes for simulating COVID-19 is presented.

  • Lattice size is varied to accommodate incoming susceptible or infectious population.

  • Sensitivity analysis of model parameters is presented.

  • Peak and duration of active infections under different scenarios are studied.

Abstract

Background and Objective:COVID-19 pandemic continues unabated due to the rapid spread of new mutant strains of the virus. Decentralized cluster containment is an efficient approach to manage the pandemic in the long term, without straining the healthcare system and economy.

In this study, the objective is to forecast the peak and duration of COVID-19 spread in a cluster under different conditions, using a probabilistic cellular automata configuration designed to include the observed characteristics of the pandemic with appropriate neighbourhood schemes and transition rules.

Methods: The cellular automata, initially configured to have only susceptible and exposed states, enlarges and evolves in discrete time steps to different infection states of the COVID-19 pandemic. The transition rules take into account the probability and proximity of contact between infected hosts and susceptible individuals. A transmittable and transition neighbourhoods are defined to identify the most probable individuals infected from a single host in a time step.

Results: The model with novel neighbourhood schemes and transition rules reproduce the macroscopic behaviour of infection and recovery observed in pandemics. The temporal evolution of the pandemic trajectory is sensitive to lattice size, range, latent and recovery periods but has constraints in capturing the changes in the infectious period. A study of lockdown and migration scenarios shows strict social isolation is crucial in controlling the pandemic. The simulations also indicate that earlier vaccination with a higher capacity and rate is essential to mitigate the pandemic. A comparison of simulated and actual data shows a good match.

Conclusions: The study concludes that social isolation during movement and interaction of people can limit the spread of new infections. Vaccinating a large proportion of the population reduces new cases in subsequent waves of the pandemic. The model and algorithm with real-world data as input can quickly forecast the trajectory of the pandemic, for effective response in cluster containment.

Keywords

Covid-19
Computational model
Probabilistic cellular automata
Lockdown
Migration
Vaccination

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