4.4 Article

A Hypothesis-Free Bridging of Disease Dynamics and Non-pharmaceutical Policies

期刊

BULLETIN OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY
卷 84, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11538-022-01012-8

关键词

Hypothesis-free; Non-pharmaceutical policies; COVID-19; Inverse method; Machine Learning; Generalized boosting model

资金

  1. Alberta Innovates [RES0052027]
  2. Pfizer [RES0052027]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2020-03911]
  4. NSERC [RGPAS2020-00090]
  5. National Institute for Mathematical Sciences (NIMS) - Korean Government [NIMS-B22910000]
  6. NSERC Discovery Grant

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study combines a mechanistic model with a machine learning algorithm to predict the number of daily confirmed cases of COVID-19 by estimating the transmission rate from non-pharmaceutical policy data. The resulting model accurately forecasts the number of cases in the future and identifies the most informative predictive variables. This research is important for improving prediction models and informing policymakers.
Accurate prediction of the number of daily or weekly confirmed cases of COVID-19 is critical to the control of the pandemic. Existing mechanistic models nicely capture the disease dynamics. However, to forecast the future, they require the transmission rate to be known, limiting their prediction power. Typically, a hypothesis is made on the form of the transmission rate with respect to time. Yet the real form is too complex to be mechanistically modeled due to the unknown dynamics of many influential factors. We tackle this problem by using a hypothesis-free machine-learning algorithm to estimate the transmission rate from data on non-pharmaceutical policies, and in turn forecast the confirmed cases using a mechanistic disease model. More specifically, we build a hybrid model consisting of a mechanistic ordinary differential equation (ODE) model and a gradient boosting model (GBM). To calibrate the parameters, we develop an inverse method that obtains the transmission rate inversely from the other variables in the ODE model and then feed it into the GBM to connect with the policy data. The resulting model forecasted the number of daily confirmed cases up to 35 days in the future in the USA with an averaged mean absolute percentage error of 27%. It can identify the most informative predictive variables, which can be helpful in designing improved forecasters as well as informing policymakers.

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