Codes by Shrey

Human Performance + Biomedical Context

Applied biomechanics, coaching, and movement systems.

A professional bridge between biomedical engineering, physical therapy clinic exposure, NASM training, swim instruction, and movement coaching.

Certified Practice Areas

  • Certified biomechanics specialist framing
  • NASM personal training and corrective exercise lens
  • Performance, nutrition, and behavior-change education
  • Physical therapy clinic and patient-facing coaching context

Domain

Human performance

Base

BS Biomedical Engineering

Practice

Assessment, coaching, retesting

Bridge

Body systems to product systems

Coaching Lens

Biomechanics work is framed as a feedback system: assess movement, identify constraints, intervene with clear cues or progressions, then retest how the body adapts.

Assessment Motor Learning Strength Progression Recovery

Clinical Movement Context

Physical therapy clinic exposure and patient-facing coaching shaped a practical communication style: explain movement simply, respect pain and uncertainty, and help clients understand what to do next.

Patient Education Pain-Free Movement Rehab Context

Systems Model

The approach integrates breath mechanics, ribcage and pelvis organization, gait, strength skill, fascia, connective tissue, perception, and environmental constraints.

Breath Mechanics Gait Tissue Adaptation Constraints

Product Relevance

This background informs HapTrek, Practice Intuition, and human-performance product work: interfaces should respect how people sense, move, compensate, learn, and recover.

Haptics Biofeedback Coaching Workflows

Relevant Coursework + Training

Biomedical Engineering

Biomechanics, biomaterials, physiology, medical-device thinking, body systems, and engineering design constraints.

NASM + Coaching

Personal training, corrective exercise, performance enhancement, behavior change, and nutrition-informed coaching language.

Applied Practice

Swim instruction, movement coaching, physical therapy clinic exposure, strength training, gait, and client education.

Professional Translation

The portfolio use of biomechanics is not just fitness content. It is a practical human-systems discipline: observe a body in context, understand the constraint, design an intervention, evaluate the response, and communicate the next action clearly.