The study of the normal function of living organisms and the means by which it is achieved.
14
votes
2answers
929 views
What actually happens when my leg 'falls asleep'?
Most people have experienced the temporary loss of feeling and tingling in their leg resulting from sitting in an abnormal position for a short while. Usually you get a loss of feeling in your leg ...
10
votes
1answer
104 views
Does stress physically age our body?
Going by the assumption that stress eventually triggers a flight/fight response, and the subsequent realization that flight/fight puts the body in a system of readiness to use it's available resources ...
16
votes
3answers
203 views
How is the blood volume of a living organism measured without killing it?
How is the blood-volume of an organism measured without killing it? NOTE: The blood-volume of an organism is defined as the total volume of blood present inside that organism.
23
votes
1answer
365 views
What is itching?
What exactly at the molecular level is itching? What physiological function does itching serve, if any? I cant remember the reference but a PLCb3 null mice lost the itch phenotype, so presumably it is ...
14
votes
3answers
308 views
Are human fetuses more likely to be male?
Question: From a physiological point of view, when sex is determined in a human fetus, is it equally likely to be male or female?
Studies in this area typically measure age at birth, where the data ...
12
votes
3answers
104 views
How are long time periods measured in biological systems?
Biological systems are pretty good at measuring fairly long times, for example, menstrual cycles (month), or puberty (years). Counting days or years seems to be implausible, and chemical concentration ...
4
votes
2answers
117 views
Extraretinal photoreception in mammals? [duplicate]
A Finnish firm Valkee sells light-ear-plugs against thing such as jetlag. I asked a researcher in Aalto university how do they really work and he responded ...
4
votes
1answer
82 views
What protocol does the nervous system use?
I just read How does an inhibitory synapse communicate to the cell body of a neuron? and found myself asking this question ... hopefully I'm not asking the same thing
Any body possessed of a nervous ...
3
votes
2answers
139 views
Why is the frog genome so much larger than a fish's?
As we have heard in the summaries of the human ENCODE project, 80 per cent of junk DNA appears to have an essential function. Many fish have a genome with only one tenth the size of a usual vertebrate ...
