Pages that link to "Item:Q465807"
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The following pages link to A fully implicit finite element method for bidomain models of cardiac electromechanics (Q465807):
Displaying 31 items.
- Computational modeling of electrochemical coupling: a novel finite element approach towards ionic models for cardiac electrophysiology (Q660312) (← links)
- The generalized Hill model: a kinematic approach towards active muscle contraction (Q904802) (← links)
- Stability analysis of the POD reduced order method for solving the bidomain model in cardiac electrophysiology (Q905830) (← links)
- New sets of spectral invariants for electro-elastic bodies with one and two families of fibres (Q1658084) (← links)
- A novel computational formulation for nearly incompressible and nearly inextensible finite hyperelasticity (Q1668771) (← links)
- The living heart project: a robust and integrative simulator for human heart function (Q1669467) (← links)
- Computational modeling of coupled cardiac electromechanics incorporating cardiac dysfunctions (Q1669471) (← links)
- Thermodynamically consistent orthotropic activation model capturing ventricular systolic wall thickening in cardiac electromechanics (Q1669482) (← links)
- Carleman estimate for a linearized bidomain model in electrocardiology and its applications (Q1705177) (← links)
- Mathematical modeling and analysis of dynamic effects of multiple time-varying delays on electrophysiological wave propagation in the heart (Q1729247) (← 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)
- Computational cardiology: the bidomain based modified Hill model incorporating viscous effects for cardiac defibrillation (Q1990854) (← links)
- Derivation of a new macroscopic bidomain model including three scales for the electrical activity of cardiac tissue (Q2062643) (← links)
- A comparative study of fully implicit staggered and monolithic solution methods. I: Coupled bidomain equations of cardiac electrophysiology (Q2075955) (← links)
- Effects of fiber orientation and the anisotropic behavior of the cardiac tissue on the simulated electrocardiogram (Q2083810) (← links)
- Cardiac electro-mechanical activity in a deforming human cardiac tissue: modeling, existence-uniqueness, finite element computation and application to multiple ischemic disease (Q2113516) (← links)
- Time-varying delays in electrophysiological wave propagation along cardiac tissue and minimax control problems associated with uncertain bidomain type models (Q2127805) (← links)
- Cardiac memory phenomenon, time-fractional order nonlinear system and bidomain-torso type model in electrocardiology (Q2131495) (← links)
- How viscous is the beating heart? Insights from a computational study (Q2171510) (← links)
- Computational cardiology: a modified Hill model to describe the electro-visco-elasticity of the myocardium (Q2308913) (← links)
- The importance of mechano-electrical feedback and inertia in cardiac electromechanics (Q2309848) (← links)
- Computational systems mechanobiology of wound healing (Q2310353) (← links)
- Parallel multilevel solvers for the cardiac electro-mechanical coupling (Q2349311) (← links)
- Newton-Krylov-BDDC solvers for nonlinear cardiac mechanics (Q2631461) (← links)
- Bioelectrical effects of mechanical feedbacks in a strongly coupled cardiac electro-mechanical model (Q2788505) (← links)
- Segregated Algorithms for the Numerical Simulation of Cardiac Electromechanics in the Left Human Ventricle (Q3300479) (← links)
- Coupled lattice Boltzmann simulation method for bidomain type models in cardiac electrophysiology with multiple time-delays (Q5212637) (← links)
- Modeling and simulation of human induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived cardiac tissue (Q6067372) (← links)
- A damped elastodynamics system under the global injectivity condition: local wellposedness in \(L^p\)-spaces (Q6071901) (← links)
- Towards predictive computer simulations in cardiology: Finite element analysis of personalized heart models (Q6153019) (← links)
- A comparative study of fully implicit staggered and monolithic solution methods. II: Coupled excitation-contraction equations of cardiac electromechanics (Q6489228) (← links)