%0 Online Multimedia %A Iha, Yoshikazu %A Kinjo, Takeshi %A Parrott, Gretchen %A Higa, Futoshi %A Mori, Hideaki %A Fujita, Jiro %D 2016 %T Additional file 2: Table 1. of Comparative epidemiology of influenza A and B viral infection in a subtropical region: a 7-year surveillance in Okinawa, Japan %U https://springernature.figshare.com/articles/presentation/Additional_file_2_Table_1_of_Comparative_epidemiology_of_influenza_A_and_B_viral_infection_in_a_subtropical_region_a_7-year_surveillance_in_Okinawa_Japan/4384268 %R 10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3617966_D2.v1 %2 https://springernature.figshare.com/ndownloader/files/7110581 %K Influenza B %K Epidemics %K Seasonality %K School-age %K Climate condition %K Temperature %K Humidity %X Example weeks from dataset 1 and dataset 2 post-alignment. Sample weeks shown here are to serve as a visual representation of the method outlined to evaluate age distribution. Dataset 1 (left) and dataset 2 (right) were combined and aligned following the selection of “epidemic weeks”. A week in which influenza A or B cases accounted for more than 90 % of all positive influenza cases was defined as an epidemic week. In the year 2007, you see an example of a defined influenza A epidemic week, whereas the year 2011 is a representative influenza B epidemic week. The week from 2013 displays a typical week which was removed from our age distribution analysis because neither influenza A nor B was dominant (>90 %). (PPTX 66 kb) %I figshare