The environment is part of human physiology

 

Human Environment Dynamics (HED) explores how subtle environmental inputs interact with physiological regulation, shaping recovery, adaptation, health and performance.

 

Human Environment Dynamics (HED)

Human physiology does not exist in isolation.

 

Every organism lives, functions and adapts within an environmental context.
From the smallest biological processes to the most complex systems of human performance, physiology continuously interacts with the surrounding environment.

 

Modern science has made extraordinary progress in analysing the human body.
We measure biomechanics, training load, metabolic responses, recovery markers and countless physiological variables with increasing precision.

 

Yet the environment in which these processes occur is often considered merely as background.

Human Environment Dynamics proposes a different perspective.

The environment is not simply the stage upon which physiology unfolds.
It is part of the system itself.

 

Subtle environmental influences may interact with the regulatory mechanisms that maintain physiological stability.


Over time, these interactions may shape the way organisms recover, adapt and perform.

The purpose of Human Environment Dynamics is not to replace existing scientific models, but to invite a broader perspective on how human physiology is understood.

 

By examining the relationship between environment and physiological regulation, new questions may emerge — questions that may contribute to the understanding of health, recovery and human performance.

 

Sometimes the most influential variables are not the ones we measure most often, but the ones we have not yet considered.

 

 

Human Environment Dynamics

Environmental Physiology

The environment is part of human physiology.