Pages that link to "Item:Q2309848"
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The following pages link to The importance of mechano-electrical feedback and inertia in cardiac electromechanics (Q2309848):
Displaying 17 items.
- A note on stress-driven anisotropic diffusion and its role in active deformable media (Q1705283) (← links)
- Machine learning in drug development: characterizing the effect of 30 drugs on the QT interval using Gaussian process regression, sensitivity analysis, and uncertainty quantification (Q1987901) (← links)
- Experimental validation of a variational data assimilation procedure for estimating space-dependent cardiac conductivities (Q1989067) (← links)
- Non-conforming finite-element formulation for cardiac electrophysiology: an effective approach to reduce the computation time of heart simulations without compromising accuracy (Q1990715) (← links)
- Mixed Kirchhoff stress-displacement-pressure formulations for incompressible hyperelasticity (Q2021235) (← links)
- Effects of fiber orientation and the anisotropic behavior of the cardiac tissue on the simulated electrocardiogram (Q2083810) (← links)
- How drugs modulate the performance of the human heart (Q2150238) (← links)
- How viscous is the beating heart? Insights from a computational study (Q2171510) (← links)
- Sensitivity analysis of a strongly-coupled human-based electromechanical cardiac model: effect of mechanical parameters on physiologically relevant biomarkers (Q2176945) (← links)
- An intergrid transfer operator using radial basis functions with application to cardiac electromechanics (Q2205162) (← links)
- A curvilinear isogeometric framework for the electromechanical activation of thin muscular tissues (Q2237275) (← links)
- On the implementation of finite deformation gradient-enhanced damage models (Q2322974) (← links)
- Segregated Algorithms for the Numerical Simulation of Cardiac Electromechanics in the Left Human Ventricle (Q3300479) (← links)
- A Multiscale Poromechanics Model Integrating Myocardial Perfusion and the Epicardial Coronary Vessels (Q5094397) (← links)
- Modelling Thermo-Electro-Mechanical Effects in Orthotropic Cardiac Tissue (Q5161995) (← links)
- Computational model of gastric motility with active‐strain electromechanics (Q6153021) (← links)
- CarNum: parallel numerical framework for computational cardiac electromechanics (Q6173758) (← links)