Anatomy & Physiology Bio 168 Chapter 1
Cell Theory
1. all organisms are made of cell
Purpose of A&P
A & P form a foundation for advanced study in health care, exercise physiology, pathophysiology, and other related fields
Adaptations
A behavior or physical characteristic that allows an organism to live successfully in its environment.
Experimental design
A design in which researchers manipulate an independent variable and measure a dependent variable to determine a cause-and-effect relationship
Gradient
A difference in concentration, pressure, or electrical charge between two regions.
Placebo
A fake treatment.
theory
A hypothesis that has been tested with a significant amount of data.
double-blind study
An experiment in which neither the participant nor the researcher knows whether the participant has received the treatment or the placebo
Effector
An organ that carries out a response
Anatomy And Physioloy
Anatomy and physiology (A & P) are about human structure and function—the biology of the human body
Reductionism
Attempting to understand complex events by breaking them down into their components
Holism
Attending to a client's thoughts, feelings, behaviors, body, and dreams. humans are more than the sum of their parts
Aristotle
Believed diseases had supernatural or physical causes Called supernatural causes of disease theologi Called natural causes for disease physiologi This gave rise to the terms physician and physiology Believed complex structures were built from simpler parts
Falsifiability
Can be proven wrong
Evolution
Change in genetic composition of population of organisms
Evolution of a population
Changes in genes
Walter Cannon
Coined the term homeostasis
Controls
Control group resembles treatment group but does not receive treatment
Cadaver dissection
Cutting and separating human body tissues to reveal tissue relationships
Receptor
Detects change
Hypothesis
Educated guess Is a possible explanation for a set of observations or answer to a scientific question
Psychosomatic effects
Effects of subject's state of mind on her or his physiology Tested by giving placebo to control group
Experimenter bias
Errors in a research study due to the predisposed notions or beliefs of the experimenter.
Histology
Examination of tissues with a microscope
Neurophysiology
Explains the workings of the nervous system
Negative feedback
Feedback that attempts to maintain homeostasis by reversing a process
Matthias Schleiden and Theodor Schwann
First tenet of cell theory
Hippocrates
Greek physician; "Father of medicine" Established a code of ethics (Hippocratic Oath) Urged physicians to seek natural causes of disease rather than attributing them to acts of the gods and demons
Natural selection
How evolution works
Homeostasis in body temperature
If too warm, vessels dilate in the skin and sweating begins (heat-losing mechanism) If too cold, vessels in the skin constrict and shivering begins (heat-gaining mechanism)
Scientific fact
Information that can be independently verified
4 ways to study the human body
Inspection Palpation Auscultation Percussion
Antony van Leeuwenhoek
Invented a simple (single-lens) microscope with great magnification to look at fabrics (200X) Published his observations of blood, lake water, sperm, bacteria from tooth scrapings, and many other things
Robert Hooke
Invented specimen stage, illuminator, coarse and fine focus controls His microscopes magnified only 30X First to see and name "cells"
Histopathology
Microscopic examination of tissues for signs of disease
Subdisciplines
Neurophysiology (physiology of nervous system) Endocrinology (physiology of hormones) Pathophysiology (mechanisms of disease)
The Hierarchy of Complexity
Organisms->organ systems->organs->tissues->cells->organelles->molecules->atoms
Claudius Galen
Physician to Roman gladiators Did animal dissections because use of cadavers was banned Saw science as a method of discovery Teachings were adopted as dogma in Europe in Middle Ages
Statistical testing
Provides statement of probability that treatment was effective
Peer review
Provides statement of probability that treatment was effective Ensures honesty, objectivity, and quality in science
William Harvey
Realized blood flows out from heart and back to it again Some credit also given to Michael Servetus for this
Adaptations for bipedalism
Skeletal and muscular modifications Changes to family structure
Anatomy
Study of Form
Endocrinology
Study of Hormones
Comparative physiology
Study of different species to learn about body functions Basis for much of our understanding of human physiology and the development of new drugs and medical procedures
Comparative anatomy
Study of multiple species to learn about form, function, and evolution
Cytology
Study of structure and function of cells
Pathophysiology
Study of the functional changes associated with disease and aging
Physiology
The study of function
Ultrastructure
View detail under electron microscope
medical imaging
Viewing the inside of the body without surgery Radiology—branch of medicine concerned with imaging
Law of nature
a generalization that describes recurring facts or events in nature
Inductive method
a process of making numerous observations until one feels confident in drawing generalizations and predictions from them "proof beyond reasonable dout"
Responsiveness
ability to sense and react to stimuli (irritability or excitability)
Integrating (control) center
control center that processes the sensory information, 'makes a decision', and directs the response
Development
differentiation and growth
Down Gradient
high to low concentration
Self-amplifying cycle
leads to greater change in the same direction feed back loops are repeated
Cellular composition
living matter is always compartmentalized into one or more cells
Organization
living things exhibit a higher level of organization than nonliving things
Homeostasis
maintaining relatively stable internal conditions
arboreal (tree dwelling)
mobile shoulders, opposable thumbs, forward facing eyes, depth and color vision. large brain
Sample size
number of subjects in study
Movement
of organism and/or of substances within the organism
Primates
order of mammals to which humans, monkeys, and apes belong
The Hypothetic-Deductive Method
process of forming hypothesis, and using an experiment to reach a conclusion
Reproduction
producing copies of themselves; passing genes to offspring
Science and scientific mdethods
set standards for truth
Bipedalism
standing and walking on two legs
Gross anatomy
study of structures that can be seen with the naked eye
up the gradient
substance moving low to high
Metabolism
sum of all internal chemical change: anabolism (synthesis) and catabolism (digestion)
Anatomical Variation
when no two humans are alike