Abstract

The human behavior has much impact on the infectious desease spreading. The pathogen generation is not uniform for the residential area since the human have some preference on where to be. The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the impact of the human preference on the seat choice behavior on the pathogen concentration. The preference of the seat selections in a train was modelled and the agent simulation was performed in order to evaluate the non-uniformity of pathogen. The concentration was calculated with Wells-Riley model. The results of the agent simulation showed the preference of seat choice based on the experimental results in a train environment. The seats at the end were more selected than other seats. The concentration at the seats at the end kept increasing because the agent sat there by turns and that is why there was no recovery time. The double effect of the more seat selection and the less recovery time has much impact on the non-uniformity of the concentration.

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