Statistical mechanics of inference in epidemic spreading

Alfredo Braunstein, Louise Budzynski, and Matteo Mariani
Phys. Rev. E 108, 064302 – Published 15 December 2023

Abstract

We investigate the information-theoretical limits of inference tasks in epidemic spreading on graphs in the thermodynamic limit. The typical inference tasks consist in computing observables of the posterior distribution of the epidemic model given observations taken from a ground-truth (sometimes called planted) random trajectory. We can identify two main sources of quenched disorder: the graph ensemble and the planted trajectory. The epidemic dynamics however induces nontrivial long-range correlations among individuals' states on the latter. This results in nonlocal correlated quenched disorder which unfortunately is typically hard to handle. To overcome this difficulty, we divide the dynamical process into two sets of variables: a set of stochastic independent variables (representing transmission delays), plus a set of correlated variables (the infection times) that depend deterministically on the first. Treating the former as quenched variables and the latter as dynamic ones, computing disorder average becomes feasible by means of the replica-symmetric cavity method. We give theoretical predictions on the posterior probability distribution of the trajectory of each individual, conditioned to observations on the state of individuals at given times, focusing on the susceptible infectious (SI) model. In the Bayes-optimal condition, i.e., when true dynamic parameters are known, the inference task is expected to fall in the replica-symmetric regime. We indeed provide predictions for the information theoretic limits of various inference tasks, in form of phase diagrams. We also identify a region, in the Bayes-optimal setting, with strong hints of replica-symmetry breaking. When true parameters are unknown, we show how a maximum-likelihood procedure is able to recover them with mostly unaffected performance.

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  • Received 25 July 2023
  • Accepted 21 November 2023

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.108.064302

©2023 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Statistical Physics & ThermodynamicsInterdisciplinary Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Alfredo Braunstein1,2,3, Louise Budzynski1,3,4, and Matteo Mariani1,*

  • 1DISAT, Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca Degli Abruzzi 24, 10129 Torino
  • 2Collegio Carlo Alberto, P.za Arbarello 8, 10122 Torino, Italy
  • 3Italian Institute for Genomic Medicine, IRCCS Candiolo, SP-142, I-10060 Candiolo (TO), Italy
  • 4Dipartimento di Fisica, Università “La Sapienza”, P.le A. Moro 5, 00185 Rome, Italy

  • *matteo.mariani@polito.it

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Issue

Vol. 108, Iss. 6 — December 2023

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