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'''Auxology''' is a meta-term covering the study of all aspects of [[human]] physical [[human development (biology)|growth]]; though it is also a fundamental of [[biology]], generally. Auxology is a highly multi-disciplinary [[science]] involving [[health sciences]] / [[medicine]] ([[pediatrics]], [[General practitioner|general practice]], [[endocrinology]], [[neuroendocrinology]], [[Human physiology|physiology]], [[epidemiology]]), and to a lesser extent: [[nutrition]], [[genetics]], [[anthropology]], [[anthropometry]], [[ergonomics]], [[history]], [[economic history]], [[economics]], [[socioeconomics]], [[sociology]], [[public health]], and [[psychology]], among others.   
'''Auxology''' is a meta-term covering the study of all aspects of [[human]] physical [[human development (biology)|growth]]; though it is also a fundamental of [[biology]], generally. Auxology is a highly multi-disciplinary [[science]] involving [[health sciences]] / [[medicine]] ([[pediatrics]], [[General practitioner|general practice]], [[endocrinology]], [[neuroendocrinology]], [[Human physiology|physiology]], [[epidemiology]]), and to a lesser extent: [[nutrition]], [[genetics]], [[anthropology]], [[anthropometry]], [[ergonomics]], [[history]], [[economic history]], [[economics]], [[socioeconomics]], [[sociology]], [[public health]], and [[psychology]], among others.   

Latest revision as of 22:39, 8 August 2012


Auxology is a meta-term covering the study of all aspects of human physical growth; though it is also a fundamental of biology, generally. Auxology is a highly multi-disciplinary science involving health sciences / medicine (pediatrics, general practice, endocrinology, neuroendocrinology, physiology, epidemiology), and to a lesser extent: nutrition, genetics, anthropology, anthropometry, ergonomics, history, economic history, economics, socioeconomics, sociology, public health, and psychology, among others.

Etymology

Auxology: aux-, pertaining to growth, from Greek auxē, "to increase"; -o-, generic phoenetic combining form, here denoting relationship to growth, stimulation, or acceleration; -logy, pertaining to the study of or science of, from Middle English -logie, from Old French, from Latin -logia, from Greek -logiā, from legein, "to speak", and -logos "word", "speech" and "one who deals with", thus "the character or department of one who speaks or treats of (a certain subject)".

The name of the plant hormone Auxin (which promotes growth in plants) comes from the same root.

Some Auxologists

See also

External links

it:Auxologia

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