Overview
This unit studies how the cells in our body communicate to each other, using fast and slow response systems, and how our bodies use these systems to gain information about the world through our senses and then respond using the muscle systems of our limbs and internal organs and the … For more content click the Read More button below.
Offerings
S1-01-CLAYTON-ON-CAMPUS
Rules
Enrolment Rule
Contacts
Chief Examiner(s)
Associate Professor Nicholas Price
Unit Coordinator(s)
Professor Ramesh Rajan
Learning outcomes
On successful completion of this unit, you should be able to:
1.
Identify the structures of the nervous, sensory, muscular and endocrine systems;
2.
Explain how physiological systems function to detect, communicate, analyse and respond to stimuli under normal conditions;
3.
Apply knowledge of these physiological systems to determine how they respond to changes in physiological states under normal activity (e.g., exercise) or environmental demands (e.g., living in cold condition;
4.
Predict how perturbations to physiological systems, such as diseases and normal ageing, effect their functioning;
5.
Accurately perform common biomedical calculations used in research;
6.
Collect, analyse, and interpret experimental data while considering variability inherent in working with biological tissue.
Assessment
1 - Three in-semester tests
2 - Practical class assessments
3 - Poster on Topic 5 material
4 - Application assessment
5 - Three sessions of in-semester problem class quizzes
6 - Final assessment - Exam (1 hour and 40 minutes)
Scheduled and non-scheduled teaching activities
Laboratories
Lectures
Workshops
Workload requirements
Workload
Availability in areas of study
Pharmacology
Physiology
Physiology