Demonstration of modeling and simulation of physiological processes using a remote lab

Author(s):  
Alberto Cardoso ◽  
Daniel Osorio ◽  
Joaquim Leitao ◽  
Vitor Sousa ◽  
Vitor Graveto ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 157-158 ◽  
pp. 1506-1514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia Huan Ge ◽  
Shan'an Zhu

iEELab((Internet-based Electrical Engineering Lab) at Zhejiang University is an integrated laboratory including physical and virtual remote experiments. This paper first makes a brief introduction to the overall architecture of iEELab. Then, focusing on the virtual remote laboratory which uses a unified object-oriented language Modelica for modeling and simulation, we elaborate its architecture and the internal mechanism of virtual remote lab operation. Finally, taking a subsystem of iEELab-the plate angle control experiment system as an instance of the virtual remote lab, we display the process of modeling and simulation of virtual experiments using modelica.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (04) ◽  
pp. 74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alberto Cardoso ◽  
Daniel Osório ◽  
Joaquim Leitão ◽  
Vitor Sousa ◽  
César Teixeira

Remote and virtual labs represent a very important support for online experimentation in engineering courses and can be used to improve the students learning process, providing, for example, experiments to simulate physiological processes in Biomedical Engineering subjects. This paper presents an online experiment, supported by a three-tank lab system to simulate an equivalent model of the physiological process of ingestion and excretion of a drug. A Web platform is used to interact with the remote and virtual labs, where students can visualize and obtain data in real time from the remote system and observe the dynamic behavior of the system considering a virtual representation.


Author(s):  
James Cronshaw ◽  
Jamison E. Gilder

Adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity has been shown to be associated with numerous physiological processes in both plants and animal cells. Biochemical studies have shown that in higher plants ATPase activity is high in cell wall preparations and is associated with the plasma membrane, nuclei, mitochondria, chloroplasts and lysosomes. However, there have been only a few ATPase localization studies of higher plants at the electron microscope level. Poux (1967) demonstrated ATPase activity associated with most cellular organelles in the protoderm cells of Cucumis roots. Hall (1971) has demonstrated ATPase activity in root tip cells of Zea mays. There was high surface activity largely associated with the plasma membrane and plasmodesmata. ATPase activity was also demonstrated in mitochondria, dictyosomes, endoplasmic reticulum and plastids.


Author(s):  
A. E. Hotchkiss ◽  
A. T. Hotchkiss ◽  
R. P. Apkarian

Multicellular green algae may be an ancestral form of the vascular plants. These algae exhibit cell wall structure, chlorophyll pigmentation, and physiological processes similar to those of higher plants. The presence of a vascular system which provides water, minerals, and nutrients to remote tissues in higher plants was believed unnecessary for the algae. Among the green algae, the Chaetophorales are complex highly branched forms that might require some means of nutrient transport. The Chaetophorales do possess apical meristematic groups of cells that have growth orientations suggestive of stem and root positions. Branches of Chaetophora incressata were examined by the scanning electron microscope (SEM) for ultrastructural evidence of pro-vascular transport.


2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich W. Ebner-Priemer ◽  
Timothy J. Trull

Convergent experimental data, autobiographical studies, and investigations on daily life have all demonstrated that gathering information retrospectively is a highly dubious methodology. Retrospection is subject to multiple systematic distortions (i.e., affective valence effect, mood congruent memory effect, duration neglect; peak end rule) as it is based on (often biased) storage and recollection of memories of the original experience or the behavior that are of interest. The method of choice to circumvent these biases is the use of electronic diaries to collect self-reported symptoms, behaviors, or physiological processes in real time. Different terms have been used for this kind of methodology: ambulatory assessment, ecological momentary assessment, experience sampling method, and real-time data capture. Even though the terms differ, they have in common the use of computer-assisted methodology to assess self-reported symptoms, behaviors, or physiological processes, while the participant undergoes normal daily activities. In this review we discuss the main features and advantages of ambulatory assessment regarding clinical psychology and psychiatry: (a) the use of realtime assessment to circumvent biased recollection, (b) assessment in real life to enhance generalizability, (c) repeated assessment to investigate within person processes, (d) multimodal assessment, including psychological, physiological and behavioral data, (e) the opportunity to assess and investigate context-specific relationships, and (f) the possibility of giving feedback in real time. Using prototypic examples from the literature of clinical psychology and psychiatry, we demonstrate that ambulatory assessment can answer specific research questions better than laboratory or questionnaire studies.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Kalezic ◽  
U. Aasa ◽  
M. Barnekow-Bergkvist ◽  
E. Lyskov

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