In this unit students gain an in-depth understanding of the physiological mechanisms involved during the acute responses to exercise and chronic adaptations to training. The unit focuses on the mechanisms responsible for the adaptations of the various systems (i.e. cardiovascular, respiratory, metabolic, endocrine, and neuromuscular) of the human body as a result of exercise and training interventions undertaken in both normal and extreme environmental conditions. The unit also examines the impact of the physiological adaptations induced by exercise and training interventions on human health and human performances. Students are introduced to advances in the different sub-disciplines of exercise physiology, including molecular physiology, metabolism, cardiovascular and respiratory physiology, and neuromuscular physiology. During the practical classes, students are familiarised with the laboratory techniques used to measure acute responses to exercise and chronic adaptations of the various systems and training interventions in both normal and adverse conditions (heat and hypoxic conditions are created in the environmental exercise laboratory).
Unit details
Location:
Study level:
Undergraduate
Credit points:
12
Unit code:
AHE3100
Prerequisites
SCL1002 - Exercise Physiology or
RBM1528 - Human Physiology 2
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Learning Outcomes
1. | Apply understanding of the physiological mechanisms to gauge the acute responses to exercise and chronic adaptations to training; | ||
2. | Evaluate the role played by the responses of the different systems on human health and human performances; | ||
3. | Analyse, interpret, and discuss results from exercise physiology experiments; and | ||
4. | Critically analyse and synthesise scientific literature in exercise physiology and effectively communicate findings to diverse audiences. |
Assessment
Assessment type | Description | Grade |
---|---|---|
ICT (Wiki, Web sites) | Sports Science Blog | 30% |
Exercise | Laboratory Workbooks | 40% |
Presentation | Group Conference Presentation | 30% |
Where to next?
As part of a course
This unit is studied as part of the following courses. Refer to the course page for information on how to apply for the course.
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