Sight (vision) Flashcards

1
Q

transparent thick sheet of fibrous tissue, anterior 1/6th; starts to bends light,
first part of eye light hits.

A

cornea

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2
Q

thin layer of cells that lines the inside of your eyelids from the eye.

A

Conjunctiva

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3
Q

space filled with aqueous humour, which provides pressure to maintain shape of eyeball; allows nutrients and minerals to supply cells of cornea/iris.

A

anterior chamber

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4
Q

the opening in the middle of the iris. The size of the pupil can get bigger/smaller based on the iris relaxing/contracting respectively.

A

pupil

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5
Q

this structure modulates the amount of light able to enter the eyeball.

A

pupil

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6
Q

Gives the eye color. The muscle that constricts/relaxes to change the size of the pupil.

A

iris

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7
Q

bends the light so it goes to back of eyeball – focuses light specifically on the fovea of the retina. Adjust how much it bends the light by changing its shape, using the suspensory ligaments.

A

lens

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8
Q

attached to a ciliary muscle. These two things together form the ciliary body, what secrets the aqueous humor.

A

Suspensory ligaments

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9
Q

area behind the iris to the back of lens; also filled with aqueous humor.

A

Posterior chamber

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10
Q

filled with vitreous humour, a jelly-like substance to provide pressure to eyeball and gives nutrients to inside of eyeball.

A

Vitreous chamber

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11
Q

inside, back area filled with photoreceptors, where the ray of light is converted from a physical waveform to a electrochemical impulse that the brain can interpret.

A

retina

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12
Q

special part of retina rich in cones, but there are also rods.

A

macula

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13
Q

special part of macula. Completely covered in cones, no rods.
*Rest of the retina is covered in primarily rods.

A

fovea

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14
Q

Detect color and discern high level of detail in what you are observing.

A

Cones which are cone shaped

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15
Q

Detect light.

A

Rods, which are rod shaped

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16
Q

pigmented black in humans, is a network of blood vessels that helps nourish
the retina. Since its black, all light is absorbed. Some animals have a different colored which gives them better night vision.

A

choroid

17
Q

The whites of the eye, thick
fibrous tissue that covers posterior 5/6th of eyeball (cornea covers the anterior 1/6). Attachment point for muscles. Extra layer of protection and structure of eyeball. Lined with the conjunctiva.

A

sclera

18
Q

the electrical activation of one neuron by another neuron.

A

transmission

19
Q

conscious sensory experience of neural processing.

A

perception

20
Q

the neural transformation of multiple neural signals into a perception.

A

processing

21
Q

occurs whenever energy is transformed from one form to another; in visual sensory information, light energy is transformed to electrical energy by rods and cones.

A

transduction

22
Q

requires a physical stimulus to be converted into a neural impulse.

A

sensation

23
Q

An electromagnetic wave.

A

Light.

24
Q

In the case of the eye, light is being converted to a – by a –.

A

neural impulse, photoreceptor

25
Q

Light enters pupil and goes to retina, which contains rods and cones.
Light comes in, goes through pupil, and hits rod. Normally rod is turned on, but when light hits turns off.
When rod is off, it turns on a – , which turns on a –, which goes into the optic nerve and enters the brain.

A

bipolar cell, retinal ganglion cell,

26
Q

What are the three types of cones of the trichromatic theory of color?

A

red, green, blue

27
Q

Are there more cones or rods in the retina?

A

Rods. There are 120 million rods, for night vision and 6-7 million cones

28
Q

Phototransduction cascade (PTC): what happens when light hits rod/cone?

A

Makes brain recognize there is light.
Light hits rods (which causes rod turns off) -> bipolar cell (turns on) retinal ganglion cell -> (turns on) -> optic nerve -> BRAIN.
The phototransduction cascade is the process of rod turning from ON -> OFF

29
Q

Cells found in the retina that send visual signals from the rods and cones to the ganglion cells

A

Bipolar cells; imagine polar bears standing on top of the rods and cones

30
Q

Cells found in the retina that receive signals from bipolar cell and leave the eye through the optic nerve

A

Ganglion cells; imagine a gang of lions standing on top of the polar bears. Their tails are twisted together into one nerve all going through the retina at the back of the eye.

31
Q

This theory states that you have cones that perceive 2 pairs of four colors: red -green, and blue- yellow

A

Opponent processing; only one color in each pair can be seen by your eye at a time

32
Q

How does the PTC turn off the rods of the retina?

A

When light hits, bent retinal (11-cis-retinal) undergoes a conformational change to straight retinal (11-trans-retinal), initiating the cascade.

33
Q

Rods are comprised of protein dense, stacked discs. One multimeric protein called –, there is a small protein called retinal (11-cis-retinal).

A

rhodopsin

34
Q

Rhodopsin is to rod, as – is to cones

A

photopsin

35
Q

After PTC is initiated, which molecule breaks from rhodopsin to bind to another protein called phosphodiesterase (PDE)?

A

the alpha subunit of transducin

36
Q
A