The Rules of Contagion

(Greg DeLong) #1

  1. Author interview with Barbara Casu, September 2018.

  2. Jenkins P., ‘How much of a systemic risk is clearing?’ Financial
    Times, 8 January 2018.

  3. Battiston S. et al., ‘The price of complexity in financial
    networks’, PNAS, 2016.
    3. The measure of friendship

  4. Background from: Shifman M., ITEP Lectures in Particle Physics,
    arXiv, 1995.

  5. Pais A. J., Robert Oppenheimer: A Life (Oxford University Press,
    2007).

  6. Goffman W. and Newill V.A., ‘Generalization of epidemic theory:
    An application to the transmission of ideas’, Nature, 1964. There
    are some limits to Goffman’s analogy, however. In particular, he
    claimed that the SIR model would be appropriate for the spread
    of rumours, but others have argued that simple tweaks to the
    model can produce very different results. For example, in a
    simple epidemic model, we usually assume people stop being
    infectious after a period of time, which is reasonable for many
    diseases. Daryl Daley and David Kendall, two Cambridge
    mathematicians, have proposed that in a rumour model,
    spreaders won’t necessarily recover naturally; they may only stop
    spreading the rumour when they meet someone else who’s heard
    the rumour. Source: Daley D.J. and Kendall D.G., ‘Epidemics and
    rumours’, Nature, 1964.

  7. Landau genius scale.
    http://www.eoht.info/page/Landau+genius+scale.

  8. Khalatnikov I.M and Sykes J.B. (eds.), Landau: The Physicist
    and the Man: Recollections of L.D. Landau (Pergamon, 2013).

  9. Bettencourt L.M.A. et al., ‘The power of a good idea: Quantitative
    modeling of the spread of ideas from epidemiological models’,
    Physica A, 2006.

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