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Editorial

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 September 2015

THOMAS W. VALENTE*
Affiliation:
Editor for Public Health and Medicine, University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA, USA (e-mail: tvalente@usc.edu)
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The first two research articles in this issue of Network Science have a common theme—they use workplace contact patterns, in addition to other data, to model infectious disease spread.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

References

Génois, M., Vestergaard, C. L., Fournet, J., Panisson, A., Bonmarin, I., & Barrat, A. (2015). Data on face-to-face contacts in an office building suggest a low-cost vaccination strategy based on community linkers. Network Science, 3.Google Scholar
Potter, G. E., Smieszek, T., & Sailer, K., (2015). Modelling workplace contact networks: The effects of organizational structure, architecture, and reporting errors on epidemic predictions. Network Science, 3.Google Scholar