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. 2020 Jul 28;328:108434. doi: 10.1016/j.mbs.2020.108434

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Limited movement policy layout. (A) The corridors conserve the same identification number as in Fig. 1-A as well as the dotted lines indicating the distancing rule of the paths. The corridors also show the new movement policy highlighted by oval, elbow, unidirectional and bidirectional arrows all over the supermarket layout. Some corridors like the number 8 and 9, for instance, remain in a bidirectional policy while others like 4 and 7 now present an oval arrow policy. The last indicates that these corridors can be, for example, accessed from corridor 3 but no return can be made to this corridor. Also, corridors 4 and 7 can be accessed from corridors 8 and 9, and users must return to use one of these corridors. Lastly, corridor 14 is no longer available. (B) The last steps of a case example simulation accounting for 15 susceptible agents and the limited movement policy, the initial allocation of agents is similar to the one in Fig. 1-C. In this case, the newly infected agents remain closer to the infectious agent, in the checkout area, since agents follow the guidance rules.