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Jean-Luc Chassé

Researcher at Claude Bernard University Lyon 1

Publications -  9
Citations -  101

Jean-Luc Chassé is an academic researcher from Claude Bernard University Lyon 1. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Ventricular tachycardia. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 99 citations.

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Modeling of cardiac electrophysiological mechanisms: from action potential genesis to its propagation in myocardium.

TL;DR: A critical evaluation of the different attempts at modeling cardiac electrophysiological mechanisms, mainly at the membrane and cellular level, from action potential genesis to its propagation in myocardium is described.
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Behavioral choices based on patch selection: a model using aggregation methods.

TL;DR: The aim of this work is to study the influence of patch selection on the dynamics of a system describing the interactions between two populations, generically called 'population N' and 'population P', and to obtain a global model describing the time evolution of the total populations, at a slow time scale.
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Levels-of-processing effects on a task of olfactory naming.

TL;DR: Odor naming was modified for 18 out of 30 odorants as a function of the level of processing required and data show that the deepest olfactory encoding was later associated with progressively higher performance in naming.
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Effects of local ischemia and transient conduction blocks on the induction of cardiac reentries

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of local ischemia induced by minor myocardial infarction (variation of the dispersion of refractory periods as well as conduction velocity) on initiation of reentry mechanisms were studied by means of computer simulations based on a cellular automata model of propagation of activation wave through a ventricular surface element.
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Host Patch Selection Induced by Parasitism: Basic Reproduction Ratio R0 and Optimal Virulence

TL;DR: It is found that host investment in avoidance of the infected patch leads to an increase in optimal virulence if host investment is costly and the evolution of parasite virulence in relation to the migration decisions of susceptible hosts.