Pages that link to "Item:Q2641403"
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The following pages link to Pacemakers in a reaction-diffusion mechanics system (Q2641403):
Displaying 17 items.
- The generalized Hill model: a kinematic approach towards active muscle contraction (Q904802) (← links)
- Computational modeling of coupled cardiac electromechanics incorporating cardiac dysfunctions (Q1669471) (← links)
- A note on stress-driven anisotropic diffusion and its role in active deformable media (Q1705283) (← links)
- A fully coupled model for electromechanics of the heart (Q1929630) (← links)
- Active stress vs. active strain in mechanobiology: constitutive issues (Q1937176) (← 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)
- Influence of cardiac tissue anisotropy on re-entrant activation in computational models of ventricular fibrillation (Q2389374) (← links)
- Modeling cardiac mechano-electrical feedback using reaction-diffusion-mechanics systems (Q2389386) (← links)
- Pacemakers in a reaction-diffusion mechanics system (Q2641403) (← links)
- Electromechanics of the heart: a unified approach to the strongly coupled excitation-contraction problem (Q2655400) (← links)
- Computational modeling of cardiac electrophysiology: A novel finite element approach (Q3399301) (← links)
- Computational modeling of electrocardiograms: A finite element approach toward cardiac excitation (Q3565045) (← links)
- Apprehending the effects of mechanical deformations in cardiac electrophysiology: A homogenization approach (Q4973279) (← links)
- A multiphysical computational model of myocardial growth adopted to human pathological ventricular remodelling (Q6145119) (← 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)