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1.1: Introduction

  • Page ID
    140542
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    Throughout this introductory textbook for public health and kinesiology, the fields of kinesiology and public health ave been integrated as the practical framework for understanding introductory statistical principles. Kinesiology will be presented through the lens of human performance and physiological response, moving beyond simple mechanics to explore the complex, often non-linear relationships in the human body. By replacing generic variables with metrics like VO2​ max, heart rate variability, and muscle hypertrophy, this textbook transforms abstract equations into tools for predicting athletic potential and clinical recovery. This approach emphasized the "dose-response" nature of exercise, treating physical activity as a measurable stimulus that dictates specific physiological outcomes.

    Simultaneously, examples from the field of public health covers the macroscopic context, shifting the focus from individual athletes to entire populations. Statistical modeling is utilized to examine how environmental and policy-level changes—such as the implementation of sugary drink taxes or the development of walkable urban spaces—impact community-wide health markers like obesity rates and cardiovascular disease prevalence. By framing variables as social determinants of health and interventions as "forces" with measurable elasticities, this textbook illustrates how data-driven decisions can shape effective health policy and large-scale behavioral change. Together, these fields demonstrate that statistics is the essential language for both optimizing human movement and protecting the health of the public.


    1.1: Introduction is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Silvie Grote, Irvine Valley College.