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I present a kinesthetic model of the human circulatory system. This model connects the physical principles of Poiseuille’s Law and mass conservation to blood flow throughout the human body. Students grapple with conflicting principles, see the limitations of the Bernoulli principle, and ultimately gain a deeper understanding of the physics behind critical components of anatomy and physiology. Physics teachers collaborate with biology colleagues and learn from them how to create truly authentic biology-based physics curricula.
Building a kinesthetic model of the human circulatory system:
First article presenting this model, from 2015:
A draft copy of my article that was accepted for publication in the journal The Physics Teacher:
Interview with Dr. Jonathan Lindner, Cardiologist and Professor of Medicine at Oregon Health and Science University:
Access many more resources for teaching introductory physics for the life sciences at the Living Physics Portal:
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I present a kinesthetic model of the human circulatory system. This model connects the physical principles of Poiseuille’s Law and mass conservation to blood flow throughout the human body. Students grapple with conflicting principles, see the limitations of the Bernoulli principle, and ultimately gain a deeper understanding of the physics behind critical components of anatomy and physiology. Physics teachers collaborate with biology colleagues and learn from them how to create truly authentic biology-based physics curricula.
Building a kinesthetic model of the human circulatory system:
First article presenting this model, from 2015:
A draft copy of my article that was accepted for publication in the journal The Physics Teacher:
Interview with Dr. Jonathan Lindner, Cardiologist and Professor of Medicine at Oregon Health and Science University:
Access many more resources for teaching introductory physics for the life sciences at the Living Physics Portal: