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Main Authors: Wang, Weiyi, Piraveenan, Mahendra
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.22644
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author Wang, Weiyi
Piraveenan, Mahendra
author_facet Wang, Weiyi
Piraveenan, Mahendra
contents This study examines how contact network topology influences the effectiveness of vaccination programs in the context of human papillomavirus (HPV) transmission. Using the SeCoNet sexual contact network growth model, we evaluate age based, ring based, and several centrality based vaccination strategies across the overall, male, and female cohorts, focusing on peak incidence, timing of peak prevalence, and cumulative incidence. The simulations show that degree, betweenness, and percolation centrality based strategies are generally the most effective, while ring vaccination achieves the greatest reduction in cumulative incidence among females. Network topology also plays a critical role: higher average degree reduces vaccination effectiveness, whereas higher power-law exponent, longer average shortest path length, and stronger clustering improve vaccination outcomes. The results highlight the importance of incorporating network structure into the design of HPV vaccination programs.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_22644
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Influence of Network Topology and Vaccination Strategies on HPV Dynamics: A Simulation Study Using the SeCoNet Growth Model
Wang, Weiyi
Piraveenan, Mahendra
Social and Information Networks
92D30, 05C90, 34C28, 37F20, 90C35, 91D30, 94C15
This study examines how contact network topology influences the effectiveness of vaccination programs in the context of human papillomavirus (HPV) transmission. Using the SeCoNet sexual contact network growth model, we evaluate age based, ring based, and several centrality based vaccination strategies across the overall, male, and female cohorts, focusing on peak incidence, timing of peak prevalence, and cumulative incidence. The simulations show that degree, betweenness, and percolation centrality based strategies are generally the most effective, while ring vaccination achieves the greatest reduction in cumulative incidence among females. Network topology also plays a critical role: higher average degree reduces vaccination effectiveness, whereas higher power-law exponent, longer average shortest path length, and stronger clustering improve vaccination outcomes. The results highlight the importance of incorporating network structure into the design of HPV vaccination programs.
title Influence of Network Topology and Vaccination Strategies on HPV Dynamics: A Simulation Study Using the SeCoNet Growth Model
topic Social and Information Networks
92D30, 05C90, 34C28, 37F20, 90C35, 91D30, 94C15
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.22644