Crowd and environmental management during mass gatherings

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Abstract

Crowds are a feature of large cities, occurring not only at mass gatherings but also at routine events such as the journey to work. To address extreme crowding, various computer models for crowd movement have been developed in the past decade, and we review these and show how they can be used to identify health and safety issues. State-of-the-art models that simulate the spread of epidemics operate on a population level, but the collection of fine-scale data might enable the development of models for epidemics that operate on a microscopic scale, similar to models for crowd movement. We provide an example of such simulations, showing how an individual-based crowd model can mirror aggregate susceptible-infected-recovered models that have been the main models for epidemics so far. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.

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Johansson, A., Batty, M., Hayashi, K., Al Bar, O., Marcozzi, D., & Memish, Z. A. (2012, February). Crowd and environmental management during mass gatherings. The Lancet Infectious Diseases. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(11)70287-0

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