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How the Dynamics and Structure of Sexual Contact Networks Shape Pathogen Phylogenies

Figure 5

Network prevalence, incidence and 1-cumulative degree distributions for ER (red) and NATSAL (blue) dynamic networks with .

Note that the NATSAL network admits similar epidemic trajectories with markedly different degree distributions (A–C). Panels D, E show the cumulative distributions of the cluster sizes in the ER (red) and NATSAL (blue) networks, and illustrate that these do not parallel the degree distribution; NATSAL networks do not have particularly more variable cluster sizes within trees. Panels F and G show the variance and skewness in boxplots; each box represents all trees from the given network and time point as in other figures.

Figure 5

doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003105.g005