Informing Optimal Environmental Influenza Interventions: How the Host, Agent, and Environment Alter Dominant Routes of Transmission
Figure 4
Distribution of the A) host density, B) self inoculation rate, and C) shedding magnitude parameters for different categories of transmission mode dominance.
Droplet, respiratory, and contact refer to parameter sets which only yielded high transmission by these routes alone. Multiple refers to parameter sets where more than one transmission route was causing high transmission. Combined refers to parameter sets which did not contain a single dominant transmission mode, but did cause high transmission by multiple modes combined, and none refers to parameter sets which both had no dominant modes of transmission and also did not combine to cause high transmission.