10.6084/m9.figshare.4754317.v2
Chelsea L. Wood
Chelsea
L. Wood
Alex McInturff
Alex
McInturff
Hillary S. Young
Hillary
S. Young
DoHyung Kim
DoHyung
Kim
Kevin D. Lafferty
Kevin
D. Lafferty
Supplementary Material 6. Re-analysis of Morand et al. (2014) from Human infectious disease burdens decrease with urbanization but not with biodiversity
The Royal Society
2017
Infectious disease
disability-adjusted life year
dilution effect
global change
2017-03-27 13:48:40
Journal contribution
https://rs.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Supplementary_Material_6_Re-analysis_of_Morand_et_al_2014_from_Human_infectious_disease_burdens_decrease_with_urbanization_but_not_with_biodiversity/4754317
In our analysis, two diseases declined in burden in response to increasing population density over time, even though these diseases are expected to be transmitted in a density-dependent manner (i.e., measles, varicella). In this document, we compare these unexpected results to those of an earlier paper (Morand et al. 2014).