Heart Rate Protocol
Heart Rate Protocol
Introduction
Why do you need to have a heart? Why do you need to have blood circulate to all the parts of your body? How does your heart pump blood? What is a heart beat? Does your heart always beat at the same rate? List some activities or stimuli that you think may increase a person's heart rate. An activity is something a person does, and a stimulus is an input from the environment around a person.
Why would it be useful for the heart to beat faster during these activities or in response to these stimuli?
Are there any activities or stimuli that you think may decrease a person's heart rate?
Today, after you learn how to measure heart rate accurately, your group will design an experiment to test how a stimulus or activity affects heart rate. During the next laboratory period, you will carry out your experiment, analyze your data, and prepare a poster describing your experiment.
After you have practiced taking heart rate, it is important to check the accuracy of your heart rate measurements. Work in a group of four using the following procedure to test and improve the accuracy of heart rate measurements. (1) Choose one person in your group to be the subject, one person to measure the pulse count in the left arm, and one person to measure the pulse count in the right arm. The fourth person in the group will use the stop watch to time a 30 second interval, and will indicate when the count of beats should begin and end. (2) Both people who are measuring pulse count should write down the number of beats for the 30 second interval before saying the number out loud. Pulse count in 30 seconds ______ Next, compare the results found by the two different people who were measuring pulse counts. Did you both count about the same number of pulses in the 30 second interval? If you got different results, can you figure out why? (3) Try to improve your technique, and repeat step 2 until both people who are measuring pulse counts get the same number of pulses in the 30 second interval (or within 1 or 2 of the same number). (4) Once you have accurate readings, use the final, accurate set of measurements to calculate the heart rate for this subject (beats per minute). Heart rate = _____ beats per minute (5) After this, you should switch roles. The people who were measuring pulse counts should now be the subject and the timer, and the people who were the subject and the timer should now measure pulse counts. Repeat steps 2-3 until the heart rate measurements are accurate.
Plan your experimental procedure. Try to keep everything constant, except for the one stimulus or activity you want to test. This will allow you to measure the effect of the stimulus or activity you are testing, and minimize confounding effects due to any other factors that may influence heart rate. In designing your experiment, remember that heart rate can be affected by minor physical
activity such as changing seats, so you need to keep this type of factor constant in order to assess the effects of your experimental stimulus or activity. Plan to have each person in the group be a subject in the experiment, in order to see whether different people have the same heart rate response to your stimulus or activity. In the space below, describe the procedure for your experiment. Be specific about what you plan to do to your subjects (the stimulus) or what you want your subjects to do (the activity). Specify when and how often you will measure heart rate; you will need to measure resting heart rate two or three times before your stimulus or activity, and you will need to measure heart rate during and/or after your stimulus or activity. List of Specific Numbered Steps in Your Procedure
Your teacher will check your plan for your experiment, and make any suggestions that could improve the experimental procedure. Discuss these suggestions and, if you decide to make any changes in your experimental procedure, incorporate these changes in your description of your procedure.
If you complete these activities before the end of the period, you can begin the Hypothesis and Methods sections of your poster. (See below.)
Poster
Each group should prepare a poster on their heart rate experiment. This poster should explain your hypothesis, the basic procedures you used, your main results (summarized in a graph and/or table), and your conclusions.