%0 Journal Article %A Bertrand Ottino-Löffler %A Jacob G. Scott %A Steven H. Strogatz %T Takeover times for a simple model of network infection %D 2017 %R 10.1101/105585 %J bioRxiv %P 105585 %X We study a stochastic model of infection spreading on a network. At each time step a node is chosen at random, along with one of its neighbors. If the node is infected and the neighbor is susceptible, the neighbor becomes infected. How many time steps T does it take to completely infect a network of N nodes, starting from a single infected node? An analogy to the classic “coupon collector” problem of probability theory reveals that the takeover time T is dominated by extremal behavior, either when there are only a few infected nodes near the start of the process or a few susceptible nodes near the end. We show that for N ≫ 1, the takeover time T is distributed as a Gumbel for the star graph; as the sum of two Gumbels for a complete graph and an Erdős-Rényi random graph; as a normal for a one-dimensional ring and a two-dimensional lattice; and as a family of intermediate skewed distributions for d-dimensional lattices with d ≥ 3 (these distributions approach the sum of two Gumbels as d approaches infinity). Connections to evolutionary dynamics, cancer, incubation periods of infectious diseases, first-passage percolation, and other spreading phenomena in biology and physics are discussed. %U https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2017/02/03/105585.full.pdf