摘要

Many epidemic models ignored the impact of awareness on epidemics in a population, though it is not the case from the real viewpoints. In this paper, a discrete-time SIS model with awareness interactions on degree-uncorrelated networks is considered. We study three kinds of awareness, including local awareness and global awareness which are originated from the epidemic-dependent information, and individual awareness which is epidemic-independent and determined by the individual information. We demonstrate analytically that awareness of the epidemic-dependent information cannot change the epidemic threshold regardless of the global or local spreading information. In contrast, epidemic-independent awareness to individual information increases the epidemic threshold in finite scale-free networks, but cannot halt the absence of epidemic threshold in an infinite scale-free network. By numerical simulations, we find that local awareness has a stronger impact on epidemic prevalence than global awareness. Our findings explore the effects of various types of awareness on epidemic spreading and address their roles in the epidemic control.