Human physiology

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Professional and non-professional biologists study human physiology to understand the workings of the human body and its component parts, at one or more levels of the human body’s organization.

By workings, physiologists refer to the underlying mechanisms that operate to manifest themselves in observable properties, functions and behaviors of the body and its components (e.g., sweating, digestion, muscle contraction, vision, cell division).

A human physiologist might ask, for example:

  • How does the body respond to large or small decreases or increases in ambient temperature;
    • which of its component parts participate in the response;
    • in what way do they participate;
    • what accounts for the mechanisms that operate in each individual component response; and,
    • how does the overall response become integrated.

The complexity of the human body’s coordinated response to an unusually hot or cold day does not admit of a simplistic account — i.e., an account sufficient to explain the response, predict its properties, or control it.

By one or more levels of organization they refer to such levels of organization as intracellular molecular networks, cellular activity, organ activity, inter-organ interactions, and whole-body behavior — always in relation to a level's environment.

At any level of the body's organization, elucidating the operative underlying mechanisms may require integrating principles and information from other disciplines, including chemistry, physics, mathematics, computer modelling, systems biology, and many others.

This article will describe the major subsystems that comprise the components of the living human system and attempt to show how those subsystems interact in a coordinated way that contributes to the emergence and maintenance of the living system.