Special Senses. Important Concepts. Anatomy of the Eye. Anatomy of the Eye. Biol 219 Lecture 17 Vision Fall The Eye and Vision

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Special Senses. Important Concepts. Anatomy of the Eye. Anatomy of the Eye. Biol 219 Lecture 17 Vision Fall The Eye and Vision"

Transcription

1 Special Senses The Eye and Vision Important Concepts Describe the structures of the eye and the role of each structure in vision. Trace the pathway for vis ion from the retina to the visual cortex. Explain how photoreceptors convert light energy into action potentials. Explain signal processing in the retina and in the visual cortex. Anatomy of the Eye Protected in orbits by the bones of the skull Upper and lower eyelids Lacrimal apparatus washes with tears Pupil is an opening that widens and shrinks when pupillary muscles contract Colored ring of pigment is the iris Anatomy of the Eye Two chambers in the eye In front of the lens filled with aqueous humor covered by cornea Behind the lens, larger vitreous chamber filled with vitreous body (humor) Retina layer lines the back of the eye and contains photoreceptors Optic disk (blind spot) is location where neurons join into the optic nerve Optic nerves cross over in the optic chiasm Optic tracts end at the visual cortex in the occipital lobe 1

2 Lacrimal gland secretes tears. Muscles attached to external surface of eye control eye movement. Sagittal Section of the Eye Upper eyelid Sclera Pupil Zonules: attach lens to ciliary muscle Lens bends light to focus it on the retina. Iris Lower eyelid Canal of Schlemm Aqueous humor Cornea Pupil changes amount of light entering the eye. Iris Optic dis k (blind spot): region whe re optic ne rv e a nd blood vessels leave the eye Ce ntra l retinal artery and vein emerge from center of optic disk. Optic ne rv e Fovea: re gion of sharpest vision Vitreous chamber The orbit is a bony cavity Nasolacrimal duct drains that protects the eye. tears into nasal cavity. Retina: layer that contains photoreceptors Sclera is connective tissue. The Eye Lens shape is adjusted by contraction and relaxation of the ciliary muscle. 2

3 The Eye and Vision Light enters the eye Focused on retina by the lens Photoreceptors transduce light energy into electrical signal Neural pathways process electrical signals into visual images The Pupil Light enters the eye Size of the pupil modulates the amount of light that reaches photoreceptors Shape of lens focuses the light Pupillary reflex is a consensual reflex Standard part of neurological examination Constrict in response to parasympathetic fibers in bright light Dilate in response to sympathetic nervous system in dim light The Visual Pathway via CNII Figure 10.26c Pathways for vision and the pupillary reflex Optic Optic ner ve chiasm Optic Later al geniculate tr act body (thalamus) Visual cortex (occipital lobe) Collateral pathways leave the thalamus and synapse in the midbrain to control constriction of the pupils. Light Eye Midbr ain Cranial nerve III controls pupillary constriction. 3

4 The Lens Figure 10.27ab Optics of the Eye Optics describes light behavior and properties Light passing through a curved surface will bend or refract. Light entering eye is refracted, or bent At the cornea and lens Refraction influenced by the angle at which light meets the lens A concave lens scatters light rays. Concave lens Parallel light rays A convex lens causes light rays to converge. Conve x lens Focal point Parallel light rays Focal length The focal length of the lens is the distance from the center of the lens to the focal point. Accommodation Accommodation Process by which the eye adjusts lens shape to keep objects in focus Near point of accommodation is the closest distance at which the lens can focus an object Myopia Focal point falls in front of the retina Hyperopia Focal point falls behind the retina Presbyopia is loss of accommodation Astigmatism Usually caused by a cornea that is not a perfectly shaped dome, resulting in distorted images 4

5 Accommodation Focusing on objects at different distances requires changing the shape of the lens: flatter lens for distant objects, more rounded (convex) lens for close objects Figure Optics of the Eye C ommon vi si on defects can be corrected wi th external l enses. Hyperopia, or far-si ght edness, occur s when the focal point falls behi nd t he r et i na. Hyper opi a ( corr ect ed with a convex lens) Myopia, or near - si ght edness, occur s when the focal point falls in front of the retina. Myopia (corrected with a concave l ens) Phototransduction Converts light energy into electrical signals Photoreceptors Rods and cones Modified ganglion cells contain melanopsin to respond to changing light cues Most acute vision occurs at the fovea and macula Optic disk has no photoreceptors and is called the blind spot Figure 10.29a The Retina Fixation point Dorsal view of a section of the right eye Light Lens Retina Fovea Macula Optic nerve 5

6 Figure 10.29b The Retina Figure 10.29c The Retina Axons from the retina exit via the optic nerve. The projected image is upside down on the retina. Visual processing in the brain reverses the image. Optic nerve Sclera Fovea The choroid layer contains blood vessels. Pigment epithelium Neural cells of retina Figure 10.29d The Retina Convergence in the retina Light strikes the photoreceptors in the fovea directly because overlying neurons are pushed aside. To optic nerve Bipolar cell Rod Pigment epithelium Pigment epithelium of retina absorbs excess light. Light Ganglion cell Fovea Cone Rod Bipolar neuron Ganglion cell Neural cells of retina FIGURE QUESTION How many rods converge on the ganglion cell in (e)? 6

7 Photoreceptors Rods function well in low light and are used in night vision Cones are responsible for high-acuity vision and color vision during the daytime Outer, inner, and basal segments Photoreceptors Visual pigments convert light energy into a change in membrane potential Rods contain rhodopsin PIGMENT EPITHELIUM Me l a n i n g ran u l e s OUTER SEGMENT Light transduction takes place in the outer segment of the photoreceptor using visual pigments in membrane disks. Disk s Connec ting stalks The dark pigment epithelium absorbs extra light and prevents that light from reflecting back and distorting vision. Old dis k s a t tip a re phagocytized by pigment epithelial cells. Disk s Cones contain three pigments primary excited by red, green, and blue light. Color-blindness INNER SEGMENT Location of major organelles and metabolic operations, such as photopigment synthesis and ATP production Mi to c h o n d ri a Cone Rods Rhodopsin molecule Re tinal Ops in SYNAPTIC TERMINAL Synapses with bipolar cells. Bipolar ce ll LIGHT 7

8 Figure Light absorption by visual pigments Light absor ption (percent of maximum ) Blue cones Rods Gr een cones Red cones Disk Transducin (G protein) Inactive rhodopsin (opsin and retinal) In darkness, rhodopsinis inactive, cgmp is high, and CNG and K + channels are open. Pigment epithelium cell cgmp levels high CNG c hannel open K + Ca 2+ Na + Light bleaches rhodopsin. Ops in decreases cgmp, closes CNG channels, and hyperpolarizes the cell. Ac tiva te d re tinal Ops in (bleachedac tiva te s pigment) transducin Ca s c a de Decreased cgmp CNG c hannel closes K + Ca 2+ Na + In the recovery phase, retinal recombines with opsin. Re tinal conve rte dto inactive form Retinal recombines with opsin to form rhodopsin. Violet Blue Gr een Yellow Or ange Red Me m b ran e p o te n ti a l in dark = 40mV Me m b ran e hyperpolarizes to 70 mv GRAPH Wavelength (nm) QUESTIONS 1. Which pigm ent absor bs light over the br oadest spectr um of wavelengths? 2. Over the nar r owest? 3. Which cone pigm ent absor bs the m ost light at 500 nm? Rod Tonic release of neurotransmitter onto bipolar neurons Light Neurotransmitter release decreases in proportion to amount of light. FIGURE QUESTION One rod c ontains about 1 0,00 0 CNG channels open in the dark. One photon of light ac tiva tes one rhodopsin. Ea c h rhodopsin activates 800 transducin. Each transducin cascade removes 6 cgmp. A decrease of 24 cgmp closes one CNG channel. How many photons are needed to close all the CNG channels inone rod? Signal Processing Photoreceptor cells converge in bipolar neurons Multiple bipolar neurons converge onto one ganglion cell Horizontal cells synapse with photoreceptors and bipolar cells Signal Processing Amacrine cells modulate information between bipolar and ganglion cells The central portion of the visual field is the binocular zone Processed to give 3D vision 8

9 Figure 10.33c Visual fields The retina uses contrast rather than absolute light intensity for better detection of weak stimuli. Visual Field Type Field Is On-Center/Off-Surround Field Is Off-Center/On-Surround On-center, off-surround Figure Binocular vision Binocular zone is whe re le ft a nd right visual fields overlap. Monocular zone is the portion of the visual field associated with only one eye. Left visual field Visual field Binocular zone Right visual field Bright light onto center Ganglion cell is excited by light in the center of the visual field. Ganglion cell is inhibited by light in the center of the visual field. Off-center, on-surround Bright light onto surround Ganglion cell is inhibited by light on the surround of the visual field. Ganglion cell is excited by light on the surround of the visual field. Optic c hia sm Optic ne rv e Bright light onto surround Both field types Optic tra c t Diffuse light on both center and surround Ganglion cell responds we a k ly. Ganglion cell responds we a k ly. Lateral geniculate body (thalamus) 2016 Pearson Visual Education, cortex Inc. Test Your Knowledge An area of the retina that contains only cones and is the site of sharpest vision is the A) outer segment. B) inner segment. C) fovea. D) optic disc. E) tapetum lucidum. 9

10 An area of the retina that contains only cones and is the site of sharpest vision is the A) outer segment. B) inner segment. ØC) fovea. D) optic disc. Accommodation describes the focusing of light on the retina by changing A) the shape of the lens. B) pupillary diameter. C) the shape of the cornea. D) distance of the retina from the lens. E) tapetum lucidum. Accommodation describes the focusing of light on the retina by changing ØA) the shape of the lens. B) pupillary diameter. C) the shape of the cornea. D) distance of the retina from the lens. Which of the following cells involved in processing visual information in the retina synapse with the rods? A) horizontal cells only B) ganglion cells only C) bipolar cells only D) horizontal and bipolar cells only E) horizontal, ganglion, and bipolar 10

11 Which of the following cells involved in processing visual information in the retina synapse with the rods? A) horizontal cells only B) ganglion cells only C) bipolar cells only D) horizontal and bipolar cells only ØE) horizontal, ganglion, and bipolar Photoreceptors secrete the neurotransmitter A) acetylcholine. B) norepinephrine. C) glutamate. D) dopamine. Photoreceptors secrete the neurotransmitter A) acetylcholine. B) norepinephrine. ØC) glutamate. D) dopamine. 11

PHGY Physiology. SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Vision. Martin Paré

PHGY Physiology. SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Vision. Martin Paré PHGY 212 - Physiology SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Vision Martin Paré Assistant Professor of Physiology & Psychology pare@biomed.queensu.ca http://brain.phgy.queensu.ca/pare The Process of Vision Vision is the process

More information

PHGY Physiology. The Process of Vision. SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Vision. Martin Paré. Visible Light. Ocular Anatomy. Ocular Anatomy.

PHGY Physiology. The Process of Vision. SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Vision. Martin Paré. Visible Light. Ocular Anatomy. Ocular Anatomy. PHGY 212 - Physiology SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Vision Martin Paré Assistant Professor of Physiology & Psychology pare@biomed.queensu.ca http://brain.phgy.queensu.ca/pare The Process of Vision Vision is the process

More information

Visual System I Eye and Retina

Visual System I Eye and Retina Visual System I Eye and Retina Reading: BCP Chapter 9 www.webvision.edu The Visual System The visual system is the part of the NS which enables organisms to process visual details, as well as to perform

More information

Chapter Six Chapter Six

Chapter Six Chapter Six Chapter Six Chapter Six Vision Sight begins with Light The advantages of electromagnetic radiation (Light) as a stimulus are Electromagnetic energy is abundant, travels VERY quickly and in fairly straight

More information

Coarse hairs that overlie the supraorbital margins Functions include: Shading the eye Preventing perspiration from reaching the eye

Coarse hairs that overlie the supraorbital margins Functions include: Shading the eye Preventing perspiration from reaching the eye SPECIAL SENSES (INDERA KHUSUS) Dr.Milahayati Daulay Departemen Fisiologi FK USU Eye and Associated Structures 70% of all sensory receptors are in the eye Most of the eye is protected by a cushion of fat

More information

Sensory receptors External internal stimulus change detectable energy transduce action potential different strengths different frequencies

Sensory receptors External internal stimulus change detectable energy transduce action potential different strengths different frequencies General aspects Sensory receptors ; respond to changes in the environment. External or internal environment. A stimulus is a change in the environmental condition which is detectable by a sensory receptor

More information

The Special Senses: Vision

The Special Senses: Vision OLLI Lecture 5 The Special Senses: Vision Vision The eyes are the sensory organs for vision. They collect light waves through their photoreceptors (located in the retina) and transmit them as nerve impulses

More information

Special Senses: The Eye

Special Senses: The Eye Collin County Community College BIOL 2401: Week 9 Special Senses: The Eye 1 VISION As humans, we rely on Vision more than any other special sense. The eye itself is surrounded by accessory structures Eyelids

More information

EYE ANATOMY. Multimedia Health Education. Disclaimer

EYE ANATOMY. Multimedia Health Education. Disclaimer Disclaimer This movie is an educational resource only and should not be used to manage your health. The information in this presentation has been intended to help consumers understand the structure and

More information

Vision. By. Leanora Thompson, Karen Vega, and Abby Brainerd

Vision. By. Leanora Thompson, Karen Vega, and Abby Brainerd Vision By. Leanora Thompson, Karen Vega, and Abby Brainerd Anatomy Outermost part of the eye is the Sclera. Cornea transparent part of outer layer Two cavities by the lens. Anterior cavity = Aqueous humor

More information

November 14, 2017 Vision: photoreceptor cells in eye 3 grps of accessory organs 1-eyebrows, eyelids, & eyelashes 2- lacrimal apparatus:

November 14, 2017 Vision: photoreceptor cells in eye 3 grps of accessory organs 1-eyebrows, eyelids, & eyelashes 2- lacrimal apparatus: Vision: photoreceptor cells in eye 3 grps of accessory organs 1-eyebrows, eyelids, & eyelashes eyebrows: protection from debris & sun eyelids: continuation of skin, protection & lubrication eyelashes:

More information

Slide 4 Now we have the same components that we find in our eye. The analogy is made clear in this slide. Slide 5 Important structures in the eye

Slide 4 Now we have the same components that we find in our eye. The analogy is made clear in this slide. Slide 5 Important structures in the eye Vision 1 Slide 2 The obvious analogy for the eye is a camera, and the simplest camera is a pinhole camera: a dark box with light-sensitive film on one side and a pinhole on the other. The image is made

More information

10/8/ dpt. n 21 = n n' r D = The electromagnetic spectrum. A few words about light. BÓDIS Emőke 02 October Optical Imaging in the Eye

10/8/ dpt. n 21 = n n' r D = The electromagnetic spectrum. A few words about light. BÓDIS Emőke 02 October Optical Imaging in the Eye A few words about light BÓDIS Emőke 02 October 2012 Optical Imaging in the Eye Healthy eye: 25 cm, v1 v2 Let s determine the change in the refractive power between the two extremes during accommodation!

More information

Vision. By: Karen, Jaqui, and Jen

Vision. By: Karen, Jaqui, and Jen Vision By: Karen, Jaqui, and Jen Activity: Directions: Stare at the black dot in the center of the picture don't look at anything else but the black dot. When we switch the picture you can look around

More information

11/23/11. A few words about light nm The electromagnetic spectrum. BÓDIS Emőke 22 November Schematic structure of the eye

11/23/11. A few words about light nm The electromagnetic spectrum. BÓDIS Emőke 22 November Schematic structure of the eye 11/23/11 A few words about light 300-850nm 400-800 nm BÓDIS Emőke 22 November 2011 The electromagnetic spectrum see only 1/70 of the electromagnetic spectrum The External Structure: The Immediate Structure:

More information

III: Vision. Objectives:

III: Vision. Objectives: III: Vision Objectives: Describe the characteristics of visible light, and explain the process by which the eye transforms light energy into neural. Describe how the eye and the brain process visual information.

More information

Early Visual Processing: Receptive Fields & Retinal Processing (Chapter 2, part 2)

Early Visual Processing: Receptive Fields & Retinal Processing (Chapter 2, part 2) Early Visual Processing: Receptive Fields & Retinal Processing (Chapter 2, part 2) Lecture 5 Jonathan Pillow Sensation & Perception (PSY 345 / NEU 325) Princeton University, Spring 2015 1 Summary of last

More information

2 The First Steps in Vision

2 The First Steps in Vision 2 The First Steps in Vision 2 The First Steps in Vision A Little Light Physics Eyes That See light Retinal Information Processing Whistling in the Dark: Dark and Light Adaptation The Man Who Could Not

More information

iris pupil cornea ciliary muscles accommodation Retina Fovea blind spot

iris pupil cornea ciliary muscles accommodation Retina Fovea blind spot Chapter 6 Vision Exam 1 Anatomy of vision Primary visual cortex (striate cortex, V1) Prestriate cortex, Extrastriate cortex (Visual association coretx ) Second level association areas in the temporal and

More information

Eye. Eye Major structural layer of the wall of the eye is a thick layer of dense C.T.; that layer has two parts:

Eye. Eye Major structural layer of the wall of the eye is a thick layer of dense C.T.; that layer has two parts: General aspects Sensory receptors ; External or internal environment. A stimulus is a change in the environmental condition which is detectable by a sensory receptor 1 Major structural layer of the wall

More information

-eyelashes are richly innervated and triggers reflex blinking

-eyelashes are richly innervated and triggers reflex blinking The Eye and Vision -vision is the dominant sense -70% of all sensory receptors in the body are in the eyes -half of the cerebral cortex is involved in some aspect of visual processing -accessory structures

More information

THE EYE. People of Asian descent have an EPICANTHIC FOLD in the upper eyelid; no functional difference.

THE EYE. People of Asian descent have an EPICANTHIC FOLD in the upper eyelid; no functional difference. THE EYE The eye is in the orbit of the skull for protection. Within the orbit are 6 extrinsic eye muscles, which move the eye. There are 4 cranial nerves: Optic (II), Occulomotor (III), Trochlear (IV),

More information

EYE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION

EYE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION Name: Class: Date: EYE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION The eye is the body s organ of sight. It gathers light from the environment and forms an image on specialized nerve cells on the retina. Vision occurs when

More information

The Eye. Morphology of the eye (continued) Morphology of the eye. Sensation & Perception PSYC Thomas E. Van Cantfort, Ph.D

The Eye. Morphology of the eye (continued) Morphology of the eye. Sensation & Perception PSYC Thomas E. Van Cantfort, Ph.D Sensation & Perception PSYC420-01 Thomas E. Van Cantfort, Ph.D The Eye The Eye The function of the eyeball is to protect the photoreceptors The role of the eye is to capture an image of objects that we

More information

The Eye. Nakhleh Abu-Yaghi, M.B.B.S Ophthalmology Division

The Eye. Nakhleh Abu-Yaghi, M.B.B.S Ophthalmology Division The Eye Nakhleh Abu-Yaghi, M.B.B.S Ophthalmology Division Coats of the Eyeball 1- OUTER FIBROUS COAT is made up of : Posterior opaque part 2-THE SCLERA the dense white part 1- THE CORNEA the anterior

More information

1. Introduction to Anatomy of the Eye and its Adnexa

1. Introduction to Anatomy of the Eye and its Adnexa 1. Introduction to Anatomy of the Eye and its Adnexa Fig 1: A Cross section of the human eye. Let us imagine we are traveling with a ray of light into the eye. The first structure we will encounter is

More information

BIOPHYSICS OF VISION GEOMETRIC OPTICS OF HUMAN EYE. Refraction media of the human eye. D eye = 63 diopter, D cornea =40, D lens = 15+

BIOPHYSICS OF VISION GEOMETRIC OPTICS OF HUMAN EYE. Refraction media of the human eye. D eye = 63 diopter, D cornea =40, D lens = 15+ BIOPHYSICS OF VISION THEORY OF COLOR VISION ELECTRORETINOGRAM Two problems: All cows are black in dark! Playing tennis in dark with illuminated lines, rackets, net, and ball! Refraction media of the human

More information

Retina. Convergence. Early visual processing: retina & LGN. Visual Photoreptors: rods and cones. Visual Photoreptors: rods and cones.

Retina. Convergence. Early visual processing: retina & LGN. Visual Photoreptors: rods and cones. Visual Photoreptors: rods and cones. Announcements 1 st exam (next Thursday): Multiple choice (about 22), short answer and short essay don t list everything you know for the essay questions Book vs. lectures know bold terms for things that

More information

25 Things To Know. Vision

25 Things To Know. Vision 25 Things To Know Vision Magnetism Electromagnetic Energy Electricity Magnetism Electromagnetic Energy Electricity Light Frequency Amplitude Light Frequency How often it comes Wave length Peak to peak

More information

EYE. The eye is an extension of the brain

EYE. The eye is an extension of the brain I SEE YOU EYE The eye is an extension of the brain Eye brain proxomity Can you see : the optic nerve bundle? Spinal cord? The human Eye The eye is the sense organ for light. Receptors for light are found

More information

Visual Optics. Visual Optics - Introduction

Visual Optics. Visual Optics - Introduction Visual Optics Jim Schwiegerling, PhD Ophthalmology & Optical Sciences University of Arizona Visual Optics - Introduction In this course, the optical principals behind the workings of the eye and visual

More information

Biology 70 Slides for Lecture 1 Fall 2007

Biology 70 Slides for Lecture 1 Fall 2007 Biology 70 Part II Sensory Systems www.biology.ucsc.edu 1 2 intensity vs spatial position (image formation) color 3 4 motion depth (monocular) 5 6 1 depth (binocular) 1. In the lectures on perception we

More information

Topic 4: Lenses and Vision. Lens a curved transparent material through which light passes (transmit) Ex) glass, plastic

Topic 4: Lenses and Vision. Lens a curved transparent material through which light passes (transmit) Ex) glass, plastic Topic 4: Lenses and Vision Lens a curved transparent material through which light passes (transmit) Ex) glass, plastic Double Concave Lenses Are thinner and flatter in the middle than around the edges.

More information

Sensation. What is Sensation, Perception, and Cognition. All sensory systems operate the same, they only use different mechanisms

Sensation. What is Sensation, Perception, and Cognition. All sensory systems operate the same, they only use different mechanisms Sensation All sensory systems operate the same, they only use different mechanisms 1. Have a physical stimulus (e.g., light) 2. The stimulus emits some sort of energy 3. Energy activates some sort of receptor

More information

Sensation. Sensation. Perception. What is Sensation, Perception, and Cognition

Sensation. Sensation. Perception. What is Sensation, Perception, and Cognition All sensory systems operate the same, they only use different mechanisms Sensation 1. Have a physical stimulus (e.g., light) 2. The stimulus emits some sort of energy 3. Energy activates some sort of receptor

More information

4Basic anatomy and physiology

4Basic anatomy and physiology Hene_Ch09.qxd 8/30/04 6:51 AM Page 348 348 4Basic anatomy and physiology The eye is a highly specialized organ with an average axial length of 24 mm and a volume of 6.5 ml. Except for its anterior aspect,

More information

AP PSYCH Unit 4.2 Vision 1. How does the eye transform light energy into neural messages? 2. How does the brain process visual information? 3.

AP PSYCH Unit 4.2 Vision 1. How does the eye transform light energy into neural messages? 2. How does the brain process visual information? 3. AP PSYCH Unit 4.2 Vision 1. How does the eye transform light energy into neural messages? 2. How does the brain process visual information? 3. What theories help us understand color vision? 4. Is your

More information

Chapter 6 Human Vision

Chapter 6 Human Vision Chapter 6 Notes: Human Vision Name: Block: Human Vision The Humane Eye: 8) 1) 2) 9) 10) 4) 5) 11) 12) 3) 13) 6) 7) Functions of the Eye: 1) Cornea a transparent tissue the iris and pupil; provides most

More information

Vision Science I Exam 1 23 September ) The plot to the right shows the spectrum of a light source. Which of the following sources is this

Vision Science I Exam 1 23 September ) The plot to the right shows the spectrum of a light source. Which of the following sources is this Vision Science I Exam 1 23 September 2016 1) The plot to the right shows the spectrum of a light source. Which of the following sources is this spectrum most likely to be taken from? A) The direct sunlight

More information

SCIENCE 8 WORKBOOK Chapter 6 Human Vision Ms. Jamieson 2018 This workbook belongs to:

SCIENCE 8 WORKBOOK Chapter 6 Human Vision Ms. Jamieson 2018 This workbook belongs to: SCIENCE 8 WORKBOOK Chapter 6 Human Vision Ms. Jamieson 2018 This workbook belongs to: Eric Hamber Secondary 5025 Willow Street Vancouver, BC Table of Contents A. Chapter 6.1 Parts of the eye.. Parts of

More information

Special Senses- THE EYE. Pages

Special Senses- THE EYE. Pages Special Senses- THE EYE Pages 548-569 Accessory Structures Eyebrows Eyelids Conjunctiva Lacrimal Apparatus Extrinsic Eye Muscles EYEBROWS Deflect debris to side of face Facial recognition Nonverbal communication

More information

Yokohama City University lecture INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN VISION Presentation notes 7/10/14

Yokohama City University lecture INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN VISION Presentation notes 7/10/14 Yokohama City University lecture INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN VISION Presentation notes 7/10/14 1. INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN VISION Self introduction Dr. Salmon Northeastern State University, Oklahoma. USA Teach

More information

Objectives. 3. Visual acuity. Layers of the. eye ball. 1. Conjunctiva : is. three quarters. posteriorly and

Objectives. 3. Visual acuity. Layers of the. eye ball. 1. Conjunctiva : is. three quarters. posteriorly and OCULAR PHYSIOLOGY (I) Dr.Ahmed Al Shaibani Lab.2 Oct.2013 Objectives 1. Review of ocular anatomy (Ex. after image) 2. Visual pathway & field (Ex. Crossed & uncrossed diplopia, mechanical stimulation of

More information

Materials Cow eye, dissecting pan, dissecting kit, safety glasses, lab apron, and gloves

Materials Cow eye, dissecting pan, dissecting kit, safety glasses, lab apron, and gloves Cow Eye Dissection Guide Introduction How do we see? The eye processes the light through photoreceptors located in the eye that send signals to the brain and tells us what we are seeing. There are two

More information

HW- Finish your vision book!

HW- Finish your vision book! March 1 Table of Contents: 77. March 1 & 2 78. Vision Book Agenda: 1. Daily Sheet 2. Vision Notes and Discussion 3. Work on vision book! EQ- How does vision work? Do Now 1.Find your Vision Sensation fill-in-theblanks

More information

Vision. The eye. Image formation. Eye defects & corrective lenses. Visual acuity. Colour vision. Lecture 3.5

Vision. The eye. Image formation. Eye defects & corrective lenses. Visual acuity. Colour vision. Lecture 3.5 Lecture 3.5 Vision The eye Image formation Eye defects & corrective lenses Visual acuity Colour vision Vision http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/04/schizoillusion/ Perception of light--- eye-brain

More information

Spatial Vision: Primary Visual Cortex (Chapter 3, part 1)

Spatial Vision: Primary Visual Cortex (Chapter 3, part 1) Spatial Vision: Primary Visual Cortex (Chapter 3, part 1) Lecture 6 Jonathan Pillow Sensation & Perception (PSY 345 / NEU 325) Princeton University, Fall 2017 Eye growth regulation KL Schmid, CF Wildsoet

More information

SCIENCE 8 WORKBOOK Chapter 6 Human Vision Ms. Jamieson 2018 This workbook belongs to:

SCIENCE 8 WORKBOOK Chapter 6 Human Vision Ms. Jamieson 2018 This workbook belongs to: SCIENCE 8 WORKBOOK Chapter 6 Human Vision Ms. Jamieson 2018 This workbook belongs to: Eric Hamber Secondary 5025 Willow Street Vancouver, BC Table of Contents A. Chapter 6.1 Parts of the eye.. Parts of

More information

Photography (cont d)

Photography (cont d) Lecture 13 Ch. 4 Photography continued Ch. 5 The Eye Feb. 23, 2010 Exams will be back on Feb. 25 Homework 5 is due Feb. 25 Read all of Ch. 5. on The Eye. 1 Photography (cont d) Polarizing and haze filters

More information

Zoology. Lesson: Physiology of Vision. Lesson Developer: Dr. Mahtab Zarin. College/Dept: Zoology, University of Delhi

Zoology. Lesson: Physiology of Vision. Lesson Developer: Dr. Mahtab Zarin. College/Dept: Zoology, University of Delhi Zoology Lesson: Physiology of Vision Lesson Developer: Dr. Mahtab Zarin College/Dept: Zoology, University of Delhi Institute of Life Long Learning, University of Delhi 1 Table of Contents Introduction

More information

Vision. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Module 13. Vision. Vision

Vision. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Module 13. Vision. Vision PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, 2007 1 Vision Module 13 2 Vision Vision The Stimulus Input: Light Energy The

More information

The Eye. (We ll leave the Lord Sauron jokes to you.)

The Eye. (We ll leave the Lord Sauron jokes to you.) The Eye (We ll leave the Lord Sauron jokes to you.) When you look in the mirror, you only see a very small part of your eyes. In reality, they are incredibly complex organs with a pretty big job: enabling

More information

Chapter 2: The Beginnings of Perception

Chapter 2: The Beginnings of Perception Chapter 2: The Beginnings of Perception We ll see the first three steps of the perceptual process for vision https:// 49.media.tumblr.co m/ 87423d97f3fbba8fa4 91f2f1bfbb6893/ tumblr_o1jdiqp4tc1 qabbyto1_500.gif

More information

Chapter Human Vision

Chapter Human Vision Chapter 6 6.1 Human Vision How Light Enters the Eye Light enters the eye through the pupil. The pupil appears dark because light passes through it without reflecting back Pupil Iris = Coloured circle of

More information

The eye* The eye is a slightly asymmetrical globe, about an inch in diameter. The front part of the eye (the part you see in the mirror) includes:

The eye* The eye is a slightly asymmetrical globe, about an inch in diameter. The front part of the eye (the part you see in the mirror) includes: The eye* The eye is a slightly asymmetrical globe, about an inch in diameter. The front part of the eye (the part you see in the mirror) includes: The iris (the pigmented part) The cornea (a clear dome

More information

Biophysics of the senses: vision

Biophysics of the senses: vision Medical Physics I. Biophysics of the senses: vision Ferenc Bari Professor & chairman Department of Medical Physics & Informatics Szeged, December 3, 2015. Basic properties of light Visible electromagnetic

More information

Sense Organs (Eye) The eye is the sense organ of sight. The eye is shaped like a ball and is located in bony

Sense Organs (Eye) The eye is the sense organ of sight. The eye is shaped like a ball and is located in bony Sense Organs (Eye) The eye is the sense organ of sight. The eye is shaped like a ball and is located in bony sockets in the skull. It is held in place by six muscles which are joined to the outside of

More information

Introduction. Chapter Aim of the Thesis

Introduction. Chapter Aim of the Thesis Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 Aim of the Thesis The main aim of this investigation was to develop a new instrument for measurement of light reflected from the retina in a living human eye. At the start of

More information

ABO Certification Training. Part I: Anatomy and Physiology

ABO Certification Training. Part I: Anatomy and Physiology ABO Certification Training Part I: Anatomy and Physiology Major Ocular Structures Centralis Nerve Major Ocular Structures The Cornea Cornea Layers Epithelium Highly regenerative: Cells reproduce so rapidly

More information

PSY 214 Lecture # (09/14/2011) (Introduction to Vision) Dr. Achtman PSY 214. Lecture 4 Topic: Introduction to Vision Chapter 3, pages 44-54

PSY 214 Lecture # (09/14/2011) (Introduction to Vision) Dr. Achtman PSY 214. Lecture 4 Topic: Introduction to Vision Chapter 3, pages 44-54 Corrections: A correction needs to be made to NTCO3 on page 3 under excitatory transmitters. It is possible to excite a neuron without sending information to another neuron. For example, in figure 2.12

More information

The Human Eye and a Camera 12.1

The Human Eye and a Camera 12.1 The Human Eye and a Camera 12.1 The human eye is an amazing optical device that allows us to see objects near and far, in bright light and dim light. Although the details of how we see are complex, the

More information

This question addresses OPTICAL factors in image formation, not issues involving retinal or other brain structures.

This question addresses OPTICAL factors in image formation, not issues involving retinal or other brain structures. Bonds 1. Cite three practical challenges in forming a clear image on the retina and describe briefly how each is met by the biological structure of the eye. Note that by challenges I do not refer to optical

More information

Seeing and Perception. External features of the Eye

Seeing and Perception. External features of the Eye Seeing and Perception Deceives the Eye This is Madness D R Campbell School of Computing University of Paisley 1 External features of the Eye The circular opening of the iris muscles forms the pupil, which

More information

VISUAL SYSTEM PHYSIOLOGY. Discipline of Physiology and Neuroscience, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, Romania

VISUAL SYSTEM PHYSIOLOGY. Discipline of Physiology and Neuroscience, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, Romania VISUAL SYSTEM PHYSIOLOGY Discipline of Physiology and Neuroscience, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, Romania Outer layer of the eye Cornea - No bood vessels - Most powerful

More information

Outline 2/21/2013. The Retina

Outline 2/21/2013. The Retina Outline 2/21/2013 PSYC 120 General Psychology Spring 2013 Lecture 9: Sensation and Perception 2 Dr. Bart Moore bamoore@napavalley.edu Office hours Tuesdays 11:00-1:00 How we sense and perceive the world

More information

Chapter 25: Applied Optics. PHY2054: Chapter 25

Chapter 25: Applied Optics. PHY2054: Chapter 25 Chapter 25: Applied Optics PHY2054: Chapter 25 1 Operation of the Eye 24 mm PHY2054: Chapter 25 2 Essential parts of the eye Cornea transparent outer structure Pupil opening for light Lens partially focuses

More information

The Human Brain and Senses: Memory

The Human Brain and Senses: Memory The Human Brain and Senses: Memory Methods of Learning Learning - There are several types of memory, and each is processed in a different part of the brain. Remembering Mirror Writing Today we will be.

More information

Vision. Sensation & Perception. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye

Vision. Sensation & Perception. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye Vision Sensation & Perception Part 3 - Vision Visible light is the form of electromagnetic radiation our eyes are designed to detect. However, this is only a narrow band of the range of energy at different

More information

OPTICAL DEMONSTRATIONS ENTOPTIC PHENOMENA, VISION AND EYE ANATOMY

OPTICAL DEMONSTRATIONS ENTOPTIC PHENOMENA, VISION AND EYE ANATOMY OPTICAL DEMONSTRATIONS ENTOPTIC PHENOMENA, VISION AND EYE ANATOMY The pupil as a first line of defence against excessive light. DEMONSTRATION 1. PUPIL SHAPE; SIZE CHANGE Make a triangular shape with the

More information

Lecture Outline. Basic Definitions

Lecture Outline. Basic Definitions Lecture Outline Sensation & Perception The Basics of Sensory Processing Eight Senses Bottom-Up and Top-Down Processing 1 Basic Definitions Sensation: stimulation of sense organs by sensory input Transduction:

More information

Let s start with a retina, and then go back to structure of the whole eye

Let s start with a retina, and then go back to structure of the whole eye Slide 1) Neuroscience C 3045; Eye and Brain Professor M. Glickstein January 2017 Comparative Anatomy of the Eye Let s start with a retina, and then go back to structure of the whole eye Slide 2) King Snake

More information

The Human Brain and Senses: Memory

The Human Brain and Senses: Memory The Human Brain and Senses: Memory Methods of Learning Methods of Learning Learning The acquisition of new knowledge and skills. There are several types of memory, and each is processed in a different

More information

Chapter 22: Illumination and Vision

Chapter 22: Illumination and Vision Chapter 22: Illumination and Vision Learning Outcomes After successful studying this chapter, You should be able to Explain how we see objects? Discus the anatomical structure of the eye, Describe the

More information

Exam 3--PHYS 151--S15

Exam 3--PHYS 151--S15 Name: Class: Date: Exam 3--PHYS 151--S15 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Consider this diagram of the eye and answer the following questions.

More information

The Physiology of the Senses Lecture 1 - The Eye

The Physiology of the Senses Lecture 1 - The Eye The Physiology of the Senses Lecture 1 - The Eye www.tutis.ca/senses/ Contents Objectives... 2 Introduction... 2 Accommodation... 3 The Iris... 4 The Cells in the Retina... 5 Receptive Fields... 8 The

More information

better make it a triple (3 x)

better make it a triple (3 x) Crown 85: Visual Perception: : Structure of and Information Processing in the Retina 1 lectures 5 better make it a triple (3 x) 1 blind spot demonstration (close left eye) blind spot 2 temporal right eye

More information

Refraction of Light. Refraction of Light

Refraction of Light. Refraction of Light 1 Refraction of Light Activity: Disappearing coin Place an empty cup on the table and drop a penny in it. Look down into the cup so that you can see the coin. Move back away from the cup slowly until the

More information

Handout G: The Eye and How We See

Handout G: The Eye and How We See Handout G: The Eye and How We See Prevent Blindness America. (2003c). The eye and how we see. Retrieved July 31, 2003, from http://www.preventblindness.org/resources/howwesee.html Your eyes are wonderful

More information

HOW THE EYE EVOLVED By Adrea R. Benkoff, M.D.

HOW THE EYE EVOLVED By Adrea R. Benkoff, M.D. HOW THE EYE EVOLVED By Adrea R. Benkoff, M.D. HOW THE EYE EVOLVED BY ADREA R. BENKOFF, M.D. CREATIONISM vs. NATURAL SELECTION The complex structure of the eye has been used as evidence to support the theory

More information

ensory System III Eye Reflexes

ensory System III Eye Reflexes ensory System III Eye Reflexes Quick Review from Last Week Eye Anatomy Inside of the Eye choroid Eye Reflexes Eye Reflexes A healthy person has a number of eye reflexes: Pupillary light reflex Vestibulo-ocular

More information

AS Psychology Activity 4

AS Psychology Activity 4 AS Psychology Activity 4 Anatomy of The Eye Light enters the eye and is brought into focus by the cornea and the lens. The fovea is the focal point it is a small depression in the retina, at the back of

More information

Psych 333, Winter 2008, Instructor Boynton, Exam 1

Psych 333, Winter 2008, Instructor Boynton, Exam 1 Name: Class: Date: Psych 333, Winter 2008, Instructor Boynton, Exam 1 Multiple Choice There are 35 multiple choice questions worth one point each. Identify the letter of the choice that best completes

More information

Fundamentals of Computer Vision B. Biological Vision. Prepared By Louis Simard

Fundamentals of Computer Vision B. Biological Vision. Prepared By Louis Simard Fundamentals of Computer Vision 308-558B Biological Vision Prepared By Louis Simard 1. Optical system 1.1 Overview The ocular optical system of a human is seen to produce a transformation of the light

More information

The eye & corrective lenses

The eye & corrective lenses Phys 102 Lecture 20 The eye & corrective lenses 1 Today we will... Apply concepts from ray optics & lenses Simple optical instruments the camera & the eye Learn about the human eye Accommodation Myopia,

More information

Digital Image Processing

Digital Image Processing Digital Image Processing Lecture # 3 Digital Image Fundamentals ALI JAVED Lecturer SOFTWARE ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT U.E.T TAXILA Email:: ali.javed@uettaxila.edu.pk Office Room #:: 7 Presentation Outline

More information

Vision. Definition. Sensing of objects by the light reflected off the objects into our eyes

Vision. Definition. Sensing of objects by the light reflected off the objects into our eyes Vision Vision Definition Sensing of objects by the light reflected off the objects into our eyes Only occurs when there is the interaction of the eyes and the brain (Perception) What is light? Visible

More information

The Human Visual System. Lecture 1. The Human Visual System. The Human Eye. The Human Retina. cones. rods. horizontal. bipolar. amacrine.

The Human Visual System. Lecture 1. The Human Visual System. The Human Eye. The Human Retina. cones. rods. horizontal. bipolar. amacrine. Lecture The Human Visual System The Human Visual System Retina Optic Nerve Optic Chiasm Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN) Visual Cortex The Human Eye The Human Retina Lens rods cones Cornea Fovea Optic

More information

Chapter 25. Optical Instruments

Chapter 25. Optical Instruments Chapter 25 Optical Instruments Optical Instruments Analysis generally involves the laws of reflection and refraction Analysis uses the procedures of geometric optics To explain certain phenomena, the wave

More information

Class 10 Science NCERT Exemplar Solutions Human Eye and Colourful World

Class 10 Science NCERT Exemplar Solutions Human Eye and Colourful World Class 10 Science NCERT Exemplar Solutions Human Eye and Colourful World Short Answer Questions Question 1. A student sitting at the back of the classroom cannot read clearly the letters written on the

More information

Chapter 36. Image Formation

Chapter 36. Image Formation Chapter 36 Image Formation Image of Formation Images can result when light rays encounter flat or curved surfaces between two media. Images can be formed either by reflection or refraction due to these

More information

Ocular Jeopardy. The major refractive portion of the eye 5/12/2015. Presented by Jill J Luebbert, CPOT, ABOC. Watch This Refractive optios

Ocular Jeopardy. The major refractive portion of the eye 5/12/2015. Presented by Jill J Luebbert, CPOT, ABOC. Watch This Refractive optios Ocular Jeopardy Presented by Jill J Luebbert, CPOT, ABOC In the beginning anterior Way back Visual Pathway Say What? terminolog y Watch This Refractive optios Posterior Segment 10 10 10 10 10 20 20 20

More information

Sensation, Part 4 Gleitman et al. (2011), Chapter 4

Sensation, Part 4 Gleitman et al. (2011), Chapter 4 Sensation, Part 4 Gleitman et al. (2011), Chapter 4 Mike D Zmura Department of Cognitive Sciences, UCI Psych 9A / Psy Beh 11A February 20, 2014 T. M. D'Zmura 1 From last time T. M. D'Zmura 2 Rod Transduction

More information

LECTURE 2. Vision Accomodation& pupillary light reflex By Prof/Faten zakareia

LECTURE 2. Vision Accomodation& pupillary light reflex By Prof/Faten zakareia LECTURE 2 Vision Accomodation& pupillary light reflex By Prof/Faten zakareia Objectives: At the end of this lecture,the student should be able to;- -Describe visual acuity & depth perception -Contrast

More information

Psychology in Your Life

Psychology in Your Life Sarah Grison Todd Heatherton Michael Gazzaniga Psychology in Your Life FIRST EDITION Chapter 5 Sensation and Perception 2014 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Section 5.1 How Do Sensation and Perception Affect

More information

A piece of white paper can be 1,000,000,000 times brighter in outdoor sunlight than in a moonless night.

A piece of white paper can be 1,000,000,000 times brighter in outdoor sunlight than in a moonless night. Light intensities range across 9 orders of magnitude. A piece of white paper can be 1,000,000,000 times brighter in outdoor sunlight than in a moonless night. But in a given lighting condition, light ranges

More information

By Dr. Abdelaziz Hussein

By Dr. Abdelaziz Hussein By Dr. Abdelaziz Hussein Light is a form of radiant energy, consisting of electromagnetic waves a. Velocity of light: In air it is 300,000 km/second. b. Wave length: The wave-length of visible light to

More information

Reading. 1. Visual perception. Outline. Forming an image. Optional: Glassner, Principles of Digital Image Synthesis, sections

Reading. 1. Visual perception. Outline. Forming an image. Optional: Glassner, Principles of Digital Image Synthesis, sections Reading Optional: Glassner, Principles of Digital mage Synthesis, sections 1.1-1.6. 1. Visual perception Brian Wandell. Foundations of Vision. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, MA, 1995. Research papers:

More information

Cow Eye Dissection. Online dissection, for kids abstaining:

Cow Eye Dissection. Online dissection, for kids abstaining: Cow Eye Dissection Introductory Discussion: Tell the students that we will be learning about what eyes are made of and how they work by dissecting a cow eye. Talk about where the eye comes from, and how

More information

Visual Perception of Images

Visual Perception of Images Visual Perception of Images A processed image is usually intended to be viewed by a human observer. An understanding of how humans perceive visual stimuli the human visual system (HVS) is crucial to the

More information

The best retinal location"

The best retinal location How many photons are required to produce a visual sensation? Measurement of the Absolute Threshold" In a classic experiment, Hecht, Shlaer & Pirenne (1942) created the optimum conditions: -Used the best

More information