Light Flashcards
visible light
1) photoreceptors in the eye are sensitive to wavelengths 400-700 nm (visible light)
2) light energy varies in intensity (amplitude of the wave)
focal point and visual field
1) visual field
- field of view observes without moving our head or eyes
2) light waves diverge in all directions
- forward movement in a direction = light ray
- light reaching the eye mut be focused to one focal point on the retina
accomodation
1) to adjust the strength of the lens
- dependent on the shape
2) lens shape regulated by ciliary smooth muscles
- part of ciliary body (anterior specialization of the choroid layer)
- attached to lens by suspensory ligaments
3) ciliary muscle relaxed
- weaker flattened lens
- further away items
*it is controlled by autonomic nervous system
focal point
1) sharp image
- has to come into focus on the retina
2) blurred image
- comes into focus ahead or behind the retina
visual acuity
1) snellen eye chart
2) 20/20 is normal vision
- most clear items are at 20 feet
3) legally blind is 20/200
- you can read at 20 feet what people can read at 200 feet
myopia
1) eyeball is too long or lens is too strong
- lens cant relax
- the focal point is focused in front of the retina (unclear image of something far)
2) close images does not need accommodation
hyperopia
1) same concept
2) too short eyeball or too weak lens
visual pathways
1) each optic nerve carries info from both halves of the retina it serves
2) info is separated as the optic nerves meet at optic chiasm
optic chiasm
1) fibers from the medial half of each retina cross to the opposite side, but those from the lateral half remain
optic tracts
1) bundle of fibers leaving the optic chiasm
2) each carries info from the lateral half of one retina and medial half of the other
3) partial crossover brings information from the same half of visual field
4) each optic tract delivers to the half of the brain on its same side information about the opposite half of the visual field
depth perception
1) ability to distinguish the relative distance of objects
2) information from the visual field is delivered to each half of the cortex simultaneously
- binocular field of vision: each eye views an object from a slightly different vantage point => the image from each eye is not identical (disparate images)
phototransduction
1) converting light stimuli into electrical signals
neural portion of retinal consist of three layers of excitable cells
1) photoreceptor cells
2) bipolar cells
3) ganglion cells
horizontal and amacrine cells
1) provide pathways for interactions between photoreceptors = feedback signals (lateral inhibition)
2) horizontal cell synapse: rods, cones, bipolar cells
3) amacrine cells synapse
- bipolar cells and ganglion cells
convergence
1) receptor cells
- rods 120 million
- cones 6 million
2) optic nerve
- ganglion cells 1 million
3) convergence >100 million receptor cell to 1 million neurons
4) receptor cell may not have its own label line to the brain