AI Summary
[DOCUMENT_TYPE: study_guide]
**What This Document Is**
This study guide is designed to help students prepare for the first exam in BIOL 2113, Anatomy and Physiology I, at Chattahoochee Technical College. It covers key concepts from Chapters 1 and 2 of the course textbook, focusing on foundational principles in anatomy, physiology, and basic biochemistry. It’s a review tool, not a replacement for lectures, readings, or lab activities.
**Why This Document Matters**
This guide is essential for students aiming to solidify their understanding of the core terminology and organizational principles that underpin the study of the human body. It’s most useful when used *after* engaging with the course materials – lectures, textbook readings, and labs – as a way to check comprehension and identify areas needing further review before the exam. It exists to help students efficiently focus their study efforts.
**Common Limitations or Challenges**
This study guide provides an overview of topics but does not offer in-depth explanations or practice problems. It won’t teach you the material; it assumes you’ve already been introduced to these concepts. It also doesn’t include all possible exam questions or cover every nuance of the topics. Successful exam preparation requires a comprehensive approach beyond this guide.
**What This Document Provides**
This study guide includes:
* Definitions of key anatomical and physiological terms (anatomy, physiology, gross anatomy, microscopic anatomy, homeostasis).
* An outline of the hierarchy of structural levels in the human body (chemical, cellular, tissue, organ, organ system, organism).
* Descriptions of necessary life functions (organization, metabolism, responsiveness, etc.).
* An explanation of metabolic processes (catabolism and anabolism).
* An overview of control mechanisms (negative and positive feedback).
* A description of the anatomical position and serous membranes (parietal, visceral, pericardial, pleural, peritoneal).
* Basic biochemistry concepts including matter, mass, weight, energy (kinetic and potential), elements, atoms, molecules, compounds, and mixtures.
* Definitions of atomic number, atomic weight, and atomic mass.
This preview does *not* include detailed explanations of complex biochemical reactions, practice questions, diagrams, or a complete listing of all terms covered on the exam.