Prerequisites: Must have completed 3 of Human Biology Core (2A 2B 3A 3B 4A 4B) or 2 BIO 82, HUMBIO 83, HUMBIO 84, or HUMBIO 86. This course covers the basic principles governing human movement with an emphasis on sports applications. The course spends roughly equal amounts of time on the applied anatomy and biology, meaning both the large and small-scale body structure and function. The applied anatomy portion includes body structure (the muscles and their connections) and mechanics (e.g. forces, torque, momentum and power), which together describe macroscopic movement. The applied biology portion includes the molecular and cellular basis of movement, mainly muscle contraction, nerve signaling, and the mechanisms of exercise damage, cramping, muscle memory, delayed-onset muscle soreness, and fatigue.
4 units · Letter or Credit/No Credit · GER: WAY-SMA
Prerequisites: Must have completed 3 of Human Biology Core (2A 2B 3A 3B 4A 4B) or 2 BIO 82, 83, 84, or 86. This course covers the basic principles governing human movement with an emphasis on sports applications. The course spends roughly equal amounts of time on the applied anatomy and biology, meaning both the large and small-scale body structure and function. The applied anatomy portion includes body structure (the muscles and their connections) and mechanics (e.g. forces, torque, momentum and power), which together describe macroscopic movement. The applied biology portion includes the molecular and cellular basis of movement, mainly muscle contraction, nerve signaling, and the mechanisms of exercise damage, cramping, muscle memory, delayed-onset muscle soreness, and fatigue.
Offered in Spring 2026 at Stanford University.