PMC:7551987 / 23169-23766 JSONTXT

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    LitCovid-PubTator

    {"project":"LitCovid-PubTator","denotations":[{"id":"124","span":{"begin":167,"end":175},"obj":"Disease"},{"id":"125","span":{"begin":307,"end":315},"obj":"Disease"}],"attributes":[{"id":"A124","pred":"tao:has_database_id","subj":"124","obj":"MESH:D007239"},{"id":"A125","pred":"tao:has_database_id","subj":"125","obj":"MESH:D007239"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"Tax","uri":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/taxonomy/"},{"prefix":"MESH","uri":"https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/"},{"prefix":"Gene","uri":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/"},{"prefix":"CVCL","uri":"https://web.expasy.org/cellosaurus/CVCL_"}],"text":"Under negative correlation, outbreak severity decreases as survival increases. Across the measured range of variation in virulence–survival traits, the peak number of infected individuals decreases by approximately 23%, the rate at which the epidemic peak is reached decreases by 0.15%, the total number of infected individuals decreases by 3%, and R0 decreases by approximately 84% (Figure 6 and Table 6). Across all metrics considered, the effects of increased viral survival on outbreak dynamics is more extreme under the positive correlation than the negative correlation scenarios (Figure 6)."}

    LitCovid-sentences

    {"project":"LitCovid-sentences","denotations":[{"id":"T160","span":{"begin":0,"end":78},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T161","span":{"begin":79,"end":406},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T162","span":{"begin":407,"end":597},"obj":"Sentence"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"http://pubannotation.org/ontology/tao.owl#"}],"text":"Under negative correlation, outbreak severity decreases as survival increases. Across the measured range of variation in virulence–survival traits, the peak number of infected individuals decreases by approximately 23%, the rate at which the epidemic peak is reached decreases by 0.15%, the total number of infected individuals decreases by 3%, and R0 decreases by approximately 84% (Figure 6 and Table 6). Across all metrics considered, the effects of increased viral survival on outbreak dynamics is more extreme under the positive correlation than the negative correlation scenarios (Figure 6)."}