About this Research Topic
The 2019-nCoV worldwide pandemic once again has brought the analysis of virus transmission to the focus of countries around the world. Nevertheless, we can recognize the transmission process through the research of the dynamic model for infectious diseases, which helps the decision-making teams to take the required preventive measures. Preventive vaccination is a basic and very effective control means of suppressing the transmission of infectious diseases and reducing mortality rates. Under the voluntary vaccination scheme, whether to vaccinate or not becomes an individual game decision problem considering the social environments, economic conditions, and potential risk entailed with vaccination as well as other individuals’ vaccination decisions. To understand the cooperative phenomenon of egotism in disease propagation systems still presents a major challenge.
Since we live and cooperate in a variable and complex network of relationships, amazing complex population dynamics emerge from the intricate interactions between individuals. As a primary and effective tool to explore the complex and interactive systems, the complex network theory gives us a fresh perspective for the study of evolutionary games in nature.
The goal of this Research Topic in Frontiers in Physics is to welcome the contribution of cooperation behavior. We encourage papers using network tools to offer some meaningful reference and enlightenment for us to comprehend the rules and reasons behind social dilemmas. Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:
1. Vaccination game
2. Spreading dynamics on metapopulation network
3. Information, immunity and epidemics co-evolution on multi-layer networks
4. Optimal allocation and cooperation of vaccination resources
5. How cooperation affects human behaviors on spatial networks
6. How cooperation affects human behaviors on high-order networks
Keywords: complex network, vaccination, evolutionary game, cooperation behavior
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.