Professional Documents
Culture Documents
1 Introduction
Your introduction goes here! Simply start writing your document and use the Recompile button to
view the updated PDF preview. Examples of commonly used commands and features are listed below,
to help you get started.
Once you’re familiar with the editor, you can find various project settings in the Overleaf menu,
accessed via the button in the very top left of the editor. To view tutorials, user guides, and further
documentation, please visit our help library, or head to our plans page to choose your plan.
2 Clinical Interpretation
P waves represent atrial depolarisation. In healthy individuals, there should be a P wave preceding
each QRS complex. The PR interval begins at the start of the P wave and ends at the beginning of
the Q wave. It represents the time for electrical activity to move between the atria and the ventricles.
The QRS complex represents the depolarisation of the ventricles. Indicates the electrical activity as
it spreads through the lower chambers of the heart (ventricles). The ST segment starts at the end of
the S wave and ends at the beginning of the T wave. It is an isoelectric line representing the time
between depolarisation and repolarisation of the ventricles (i.e. ventricular contraction). The T wave
represents ventricular repolarisation. It appears as a small wave after the QRS complex. The RR
interval begins at the peak of one R wave and ends at the peak of the next R wave. It represents
the time between two QRS complexes. The QT interval begins at the start of the QRS complex and
finishes at the end of the T wave. It represents the time taken for the ventricles to depolarise and then
repolarise.
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Item Quantity
Widgets 42
Gadgets 13
3 Use Cases
4 Use case Diagrams
5 Sequence Diagram
6 Safety Requirements
7 Security Requirements
8 Potential Risks
9 Hazards
10 Hazard Analysis STAMP/STPA
11 Safety Constraints
12 Data Analysis
13 Mathematical Model
14 Fault Tolerance
15 References
15.1 How to create Sections and Subsections
Simply use the section and subsection commands, as in this example document! With Overleaf, all
the formatting and numbering is handled automatically according to the template you’ve chosen. If
you’re using the Visual Editor, you can also create new section and subsections via the buttons in the
editor toolbar.
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Figure 1: This frog was uploaded via the file-tree menu.
1. Like this,
2. and like this.
. . . or bullet points . . .
• Like this,
• and like this.
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15.8 How to change the document language and spell check settings
Overleaf supports many different languages, including multiple different languages within one docu-
ment.
To configure the document language, simply edit the option provided to the babel package in the
preamble at the top of this example project. To learn more about the different options, please visit
this help article on international language support.
To change the spell check language, simply open the Overleaf menu at the top left of the editor
window, scroll down to the spell check setting, and adjust accordingly.
References
[Gre93] George D. Greenwade. The Comprehensive Tex Archive Network (CTAN). TUGBoat,
14(3):342–351, 1993.