Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into...

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Page 1: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

Physiology of the Eye

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Page 2: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

1. Refraction

The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

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Page 3: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

2. Divergence

Light rays spread out; Occurs with concave lenses

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Page 4: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

3. Convergence

Light rays come together; Occurs with convex lenses

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Page 5: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

4. Human Eye

Lens is Biconvex

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Page 6: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

5. Image on the retina

Upside down & reversed (inverted)

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Page 7: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

6. AccommodationThe ability of the lens to change its shape; helps to achieve sharp focus at close range (<20 ft)

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Page 8: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

7. Stereoscopic vision

The ability to see objects in three dimensions; important when driving, parking, climbing stairs, etc.

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Page 9: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

8. Peripheral vision

The ability to see to the sides without moving the head

The parts of the retina associated with peripheral vision do not contain cones, so sharp vision & color vision are not possible

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Page 10: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

9. Photoreceptor responsible for vision in dim light

Rods

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Page 11: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

10. Night blindness

Vitamin A deficiency can contribute to night blindness because it is responsible for converting retineene into rhodopsin; without enough Vitamin A, there is a slow return of dark adaptation

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Page 12: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

11. Bright light causes pain

Intense light bleaches rhodopsin & eyes need time to recover & become light adapted

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Page 13: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

12. Photoreceptor for fine focus & color vision

Cones

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13. 3 primary colors of vision

Red

Green

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Page 15: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

14. True

• There are 3 types of cone receptors, each of which contains its own photochemical sensitive to one of the three wavelengths of primary colors.

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Page 16: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

15. True

• Equal stimulation of the 3 types of cones is perceived as white light.

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Page 17: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

16. Purkinje shift

Shift from light adaptation (cone reception) to dark adaptation (rod reception) at dusk & vice versa

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Page 18: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

17. Afterimages+ Afterimages: carryover of visual impressions is exactly the same as the original stimulus pattern

- Afterimages: carryover of visual impressions appear in a complementary color of the original

Page 19: Physiology of the Eye. 1. Refraction The bending of light as it travels from less dense medium into a more dense medium.

18. Visual AcuityThe sharpness or degree of detail the eye can see

Influenced by: brightness or intensity of light, size of object, color of object, and retinal area on which the image of the object falls