Nature Communications (Sep 2021)

Trade-offs between individual and ensemble forecasts of an emerging infectious disease

  • Rachel J. Oidtman,
  • Elisa Omodei,
  • Moritz U. G. Kraemer,
  • Carlos A. Castañeda-Orjuela,
  • Erica Cruz-Rivera,
  • Sandra Misnaza-Castrillón,
  • Myriam Patricia Cifuentes,
  • Luz Emilse Rincon,
  • Viviana Cañon,
  • Pedro de Alarcon,
  • Guido España,
  • John H. Huber,
  • Sarah C. Hill,
  • Christopher M. Barker,
  • Michael A. Johansson,
  • Carrie A. Manore,
  • Robert C. Reiner, Jr.,
  • Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer,
  • Amir S. Siraj,
  • Enrique Frias-Martinez,
  • Manuel García-Herranz,
  • T. Alex Perkins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25695-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Newly emerged pathogens are inherently difficult to forecast, due to many unknowns about their biology early in an epidemic. Here, the authors assess forecasts of a suite of models during the Zika epidemic in Colombia, finding that the models that performed best changed over the course of the epidemic.