Physiology plays a central role in the medical sciences, integrating from the molecular and cellular levels through to the whole tissue and organs to understand whole body function. The study of physiology involves learning core concepts and principles that are applied to the various organ systems. You will be able to apply these fundamentals as you learn about other organs systems and how their homeostatic interactions govern human body function. To support your learning, you will undertake laboratory activities that involve experiments on humans as well as isolated tissues, with an emphasis on hypothesis generation and data analysis. These sessions will consolidate your conceptual understanding with practical application of core physiological principles in an experimental context. Additional workshops and tutorials will develop critical thinking, the integrative nature of physiology, and generic skills in scientific writing and presentation. The practicals and tutorials also emphasise group learning and team work. Completion of this unit will provide you with a strong foundational understanding of the homeostatic principles that underpin whole-body physiology.
Unit details and rules
Academic unit | Department of Medical Sciences |
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Credit points | 6 |
Prerequisites
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6cp from [(BIOL1XX7 or MBLG1XX1) or (MEDS1X01 or BIOL1XX8 or BIOL1XX3) or CHEM1XX1 or CHEM1903] |
Corequisites
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None |
Prohibitions
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PHSI2907 or PHSI2007 |
Assumed knowledge
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Human biology (BIOL1XX8 or BIOL1XX3 or MEDS1X01) |
Available to study abroad and exchange students | No |
Teaching staff
Coordinator | Tara Christie, tara.christie@sydney.edu.au |
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Laboratory supervisor(s) | Richard Tan, richard.tan@sydney.edu.au |
Anna Waterhouse, anna.waterhouse@sydney.edu.au | |
Lecturer(s) | Melkam Kebede, melkam.kebede@sydney.edu.au |
Tara Christie, tara.christie@sydney.edu.au | |
Jeremy Pinyon, jeremy.pinyon@sydney.edu.au | |
Khoon Lim, khoon.lim@sydney.edu.au | |
Michelle Mcdonald, michelle.mcdonald@sydney.edu.au |