Where does the optic nerve relay back to?
• The optic nerves relay back to the optic chiasm
Describe the vision of the eye
and the inversion of the eye
What is the sclera of the eye?
The sclera is a non-stretchy part of the eye, it runs all the way round the eye to the back. It creates an anchoring point for the ocular eye muscles, they move the eye around.
What forms the outer layer of the cornea?
The collagen fibres and cells at the front that make up the outer layer form the cornea
What is the purpose of the intraocular pressure?
What is the pressure generated by?
Intra ocular pressure is generated to ensure the sclera is firm – hold it rigid. The pressure is generated by the production of aqueous humour, a fluid that fills the eye produced by the ciliary body and flows outwards and reabsorbed through the angle of the eye.
What is the function of the lens?
What is it suspended by?
The lens changes the focus of the eye. The lens is suspended by suspensory ligaments from the cillary body (which can change the shape of the lens, as it contains a ring of muscle, when it contracts its diameter becomes smaller which causes the lens to become fatter. When he ring relaxes the diameter increases making the lens flatter for distance vision.)
What is the purpose of the retina?
Retina adjusts your eye for different levels of brightness
What is the purpose of the pupil?
The pupil maintains the smallest aperture for the illumination conditions. The smaller the aperature the greater the focus.
How does photons enter the eye?
Rays of photons pass through the cornea. That are brought to focus by the cornea and the lens to a single point.
Some are stopped by the iris
Identify the retinal pigment epithelium
What is its function?
Describe the pathway of the optic nerve
Describe the photoreceptors
What are rods and cones?
Do they interact?
Do they have the same neuroal pathway
Describe the structure of a single photoreceptor
Describe the membrane potentials of a cone cell?
What keeps the sodium ion channels open?
What is the photopigment made from?
What configuration is it in?
What happens when light hits this part?
Describe diseases of the eye
On image
Describe the cross-section through a peripheral retina
* The photoreceptors are at the top in yellow, you have ten times as many rods as cones
Describe the back of the eye
What is the found in the centralis fovea?
What is the foveal fit?
Why is the fovea specialised for high resolution?
Describe the primary visual pathway
On image
How do Photoreceptors report changes in illumination from one moment to another
When the eyes first see something, you get a strong response, however over time the brightness does not change and the photoreceptor does not change – it adapts and goes back to its resting potential
What is the function of a retinal ganglion cell?
Retinal ganglion cells report changes in illumination from one location to another
What happens to the retinal ganglion cells in light and dark?
On image