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Observations

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How the Eye Works Observations Parts to the Puzzle Anatomy the study of the names of the structures in the human body When we learn the names of eye parts we are ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Observations


1
How the Eye Works
  • Observations

2
Parts to the Puzzle
  • Anatomy
  • the study of the names of the structures in the
    human body
  • When we learn the names of eye parts we are
    studying Anatomy.
  • Physiology
  • the study of the functions of body parts
  • When we learn how the eye parts work we are
    studying Physiology.

3
Humans
  • Levels of Organization
  • Highest-
  • Organisms
  • Organs (eye)
  • Tissue (eg. lens, pupil, cornea, etc.)
  • Cellular (eg. Rod and cone cells)
  • Atoms - Lowest

4
Eye Anatomy
5
The Eye Diagram
6
Frontal View of the Eye
7
Vision Summary
  • Light rays enters through the pupil after
    crossing through the cornea
  • Light rays cross in the lens
  • Retina receives reversed upside down image
  • Rods cones are stimulated
  • Optic nerve carries impulse to the brain

8
ObservationIn your ScienceLog notes, copy and
carefully label the transverse waves. In your own
words, explain what you think wavelength and
frequency mean.
You have two minutes (2 minutes) to do this
activity. The clock is counting
9
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Decreasing wavelength Increasing frequency
  • Long wavelength Radio waves
  • Visible Light range of wavelengths that humans
    can see
  • Short wavelength Gamma rays

10
(No Transcript)
11
Law of Reflection
12
Prism Refraction
13
Overview of Image Processing
14
Images and Light
  • The image projected onto the retina is inverted
    or upside down. Visual processing in the brain
    reverses the image
  • The pupils regulate the amount of light entering
    the eye.
  • In bright light they constrict to 1.5 mm.
  • In the dark they dilate to 8 mm.
  • The increase in the depth of field seen under
    bright light results from a narrower beam of
    light focussing on the retina.

The diameter of the pupils is controlled by the
autonomic nervous system
15
Fixation Point to Focus Point
16
Focusing Abilities
  • When an object is distant, the light rays are
    essentially parallel and brought to a focus on
    the retina.
  • If the object moves closer, the focal point then
    moves behind the retina.
  • To bring the image into focus on the retina, the
    lens refractive power must be increased. This is
    the process of accommodation.

17
Optics the focal point
Focal point falls on beyond retina, image not in
focus
Lens accommodates to correct focal point, image
becomes in focus
Focal point falls on retina, image in focus
18
Refraction How the light is bent
  • Most of us (70) have a refractive error in
    which light rays come to a point focus either
    behind the retina (hyperopia) or in front of it
    (myopia).
  • Hyperopia Myopia
  • (farsighted)
    (nearsighted)

19
Convex or Concave?
Convex
Concave
20
Refractive errors
Long- or far-sighted
Corrective lenses
Short- or near-sighted
21
Converting Light Stimulus to Electrical Impulse
  • Requires great coordination of parts
  • Also occurs with the other senses
  • Ears sound waves
  • Taste chemical stimulus
  • Touch mechanical stimulation
  • Scent chemical stimulus

22
Cross-section of the eye
Eyelid
Choroid
Sclera
23
Retina stimulation
  • The photosensitive cells of the retina contain
    the rods and cone which convert the light
    stimulus to electrical stimulus.

24
Rods and Cones
25
Colour vision Rods and Cones
  • Light sensitive visual pigments are bound to the
    cell membranes of the disk-like photoreceptors
    found within the rods cones.
  • Rods have one visual pigment, rhodopsin which has
    an absorption max of 496nm
  • Cones have one of 3 colour sensitive pigments
    related to rhodopsin.
  • Cones are responsible for colour vision and a
    contain pigments that can be excited optimally
    for
  • a) blue (absorption max 419nm)
  • b) green (absorption max 530nm)
  • c) red (absorption max 560nm)
  • White light is seen when all three types of cone
    are equally stimulated.

26
Rods and Cones
27
Cones
  • Cones allow for sharp color vision in bright
    light
  • 3 types, each with a different pigment
  • Cones are most concentrated towards the back of
    the eye

28
Rods
  • Rods provide for vision in dim light
  • Most dense at the on the sides of the retina
  • Contain the pigment rhodopsin

29
Neuron Neervvve Cellllls
30
Braineacts
  • LGN
  • a part of the thalamus that relays signals from
    the eye to the visual cortex.
  • It also receives signals back from the cortex.

LGN
Visual Field
Retina
Primary Visual Cortex
Rods Cones
31
Optic Nerve
32
Cortical processing
or how do we fill in the gaps?
33
RAINBOWS
  • In a rainbow, raindrops in the air act like tiny
    prisms.
  • Light enters the drop at A, is reflected at the
    back of the drop at B and leaves the drop at C.
    In the process the sunlight is broken into a
    spectrum just like it is in a triangular glass
    prism.
  • The angle between the ray of sunlight coming in
    and the ray coming out of the drops is 42 degrees
    for red and 40 degrees for violet rays.
  • This small difference in angles between the
    returning rays causes us to see the bow.

34
Challenge Question
  • Explain why the top of the rainbow appears red,
    while the bottom appears violet and not other way
    around?

35
THANK YOU
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