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Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur: A longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents

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Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur: A longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents. / Kwok, Kin On; Cowling, Ben; Wei, Vivian et al.
In: Interface, Vol. 15, No. 138, 20170838, 01.2018.

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Kwok KO, Cowling B, Wei V, Riley S, Read JM. Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur: A longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents. Interface. 2018 Jan;15(138):20170838. Epub 2018 Jan 24. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2017.0838

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Kwok, Kin On ; Cowling, Ben ; Wei, Vivian et al. / Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur : A longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents. In: Interface. 2018 ; Vol. 15, No. 138.

Bibtex

@article{20c33992257a493284a71c0674d5870e,
title = "Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur: A longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents",
abstract = "Patterns of social contact between individuals are important for the transmission of many pathogens and shaping patterns of immunity at the population scale. To refine our understanding of how human social behaviour may change over time, we conducted a longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents. We recorded the social contact patterns for 1,450 individuals, up to four times each between May 2012 and September 2013. We found individuals made contact with an average of 12.5 people within 2.9 geographical locations, and spent an average estimated total duration of 9.1 hours in contact with others during a day. Distributions of the number of contacts and locations in which contacts were made were not significantly different between study waves. Encounters were assortative by age, and the age mixing pattern was broadly consistent across study waves. Fitting regression models, we examined the association of contact rates (number of contacts, total duration of contact, number of locations) with covariates and calculated the inter- and intra-participant variation in contact rates. Participant age was significantly associated with the number of contacts made, the total duration of contact, and the number of locations in which contact occurred, with children and parental-age adults having the highest rates of contact. The number of contacts and contact duration increased with the number of contact locations. Intra-individual variation in contact rate was consistently greater than inter-individual variation. Despite substantial individual-level variation, remarkable consistency was observed in contact mixing at the population scale. This suggests that aggregate measures of mixing behaviour derived from cross-sectional information may be appropriate for population-scale modelling purposes, and that if more detailed models of social interactions are required for improved public health modelling, further studies are needed to understand the social processes driving intra-individual variation. ",
author = "Kwok, {Kin On} and Ben Cowling and Vivian Wei and Steven Riley and Read, {Jonathan Michael}",
year = "2018",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1098/rsif.2017.0838",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
journal = "Interface",
issn = "1742-5689",
publisher = "Royal Society of London",
number = "138",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur

T2 - A longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents

AU - Kwok, Kin On

AU - Cowling, Ben

AU - Wei, Vivian

AU - Riley, Steven

AU - Read, Jonathan Michael

PY - 2018/1

Y1 - 2018/1

N2 - Patterns of social contact between individuals are important for the transmission of many pathogens and shaping patterns of immunity at the population scale. To refine our understanding of how human social behaviour may change over time, we conducted a longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents. We recorded the social contact patterns for 1,450 individuals, up to four times each between May 2012 and September 2013. We found individuals made contact with an average of 12.5 people within 2.9 geographical locations, and spent an average estimated total duration of 9.1 hours in contact with others during a day. Distributions of the number of contacts and locations in which contacts were made were not significantly different between study waves. Encounters were assortative by age, and the age mixing pattern was broadly consistent across study waves. Fitting regression models, we examined the association of contact rates (number of contacts, total duration of contact, number of locations) with covariates and calculated the inter- and intra-participant variation in contact rates. Participant age was significantly associated with the number of contacts made, the total duration of contact, and the number of locations in which contact occurred, with children and parental-age adults having the highest rates of contact. The number of contacts and contact duration increased with the number of contact locations. Intra-individual variation in contact rate was consistently greater than inter-individual variation. Despite substantial individual-level variation, remarkable consistency was observed in contact mixing at the population scale. This suggests that aggregate measures of mixing behaviour derived from cross-sectional information may be appropriate for population-scale modelling purposes, and that if more detailed models of social interactions are required for improved public health modelling, further studies are needed to understand the social processes driving intra-individual variation.

AB - Patterns of social contact between individuals are important for the transmission of many pathogens and shaping patterns of immunity at the population scale. To refine our understanding of how human social behaviour may change over time, we conducted a longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents. We recorded the social contact patterns for 1,450 individuals, up to four times each between May 2012 and September 2013. We found individuals made contact with an average of 12.5 people within 2.9 geographical locations, and spent an average estimated total duration of 9.1 hours in contact with others during a day. Distributions of the number of contacts and locations in which contacts were made were not significantly different between study waves. Encounters were assortative by age, and the age mixing pattern was broadly consistent across study waves. Fitting regression models, we examined the association of contact rates (number of contacts, total duration of contact, number of locations) with covariates and calculated the inter- and intra-participant variation in contact rates. Participant age was significantly associated with the number of contacts made, the total duration of contact, and the number of locations in which contact occurred, with children and parental-age adults having the highest rates of contact. The number of contacts and contact duration increased with the number of contact locations. Intra-individual variation in contact rate was consistently greater than inter-individual variation. Despite substantial individual-level variation, remarkable consistency was observed in contact mixing at the population scale. This suggests that aggregate measures of mixing behaviour derived from cross-sectional information may be appropriate for population-scale modelling purposes, and that if more detailed models of social interactions are required for improved public health modelling, further studies are needed to understand the social processes driving intra-individual variation.

U2 - 10.1098/rsif.2017.0838

DO - 10.1098/rsif.2017.0838

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

JO - Interface

JF - Interface

SN - 1742-5689

IS - 138

M1 - 20170838

ER -