Vision
What are the two rules of visual acuity?
1. Near objects focal points are always more posterior that far object focal points 2. Accommodation moves all focal points anteriorly
When performing the visual acuity test using the Snellen eye chart, how far away from the chart does the subject stand? ______ feet. What number is considered normal vision? ________.
20, 20/20
To keep an object in focus when the object is near the eye, the ciliary body muscles change the shape of the lens. This process is called ______.
Accommodation
__________ is the ability of eye to focus on near objects.
Accommodation
Explain briefly how you performed the near point of accommodation test.
An object (such as a pen) was slower brought closer and closer to the test sunject's eye. A ruler was used to measure the closest distance that the subject could keep the object in focus.
A defect (a non-smooth area) in the lens or the cornea that causes one part of the field of vision to be blurry is called a(n) ____________.
Astigmatism
_____ is a problem in which the cornea or lens is unevenly shaped, so that some objects appear blurry but others are in focus.
Astigmatism
If a person with hyperopia is looking at a far object and their ciliary body is relaxed, the focal point of the object will fall in front of/on/behind (circle one of the three) the retina.
Behind
44. 20/15 vision is better/worse (circle one) than 20/20 vision.
Better
What do rods detect?
Black and white
The area of the eye where the optic nerve passes through the retina is called the _______.
Blind spot
The region of the retina where the axons of the retinal ganglion cells leave the eye is called the _____ or _____, and lacks _____.
Blind spot, Optic disk, Photoreceptor cells
The choroid coat of the eye contains what two structures/substances?
Blood vessels, Light-absorbing pigments
The middle tunic of the eye is called the __________
Choroid coat
Define middle tunic
Choroid coat, Mostly blood vessels and dark pigments
Accommodation occurs when the _______ bends the ______ into a different shape.
Ciliary body, Lens
When a far object is sharply focused on the retina the
Ciliary muscle is relaxe
What do cones detect?
Color (red, blue, green)
The photoreceptors known as cones allow for
Color vision
Color blindness is due to the genetic absence of one type of _____.
Cone types
What are the two major types of photoreceptors called?
Cones and rods
The _______ are the photoreceptors that provide color vision and the ________ are the photoreceptors that provide black-and-white vision.
Cones, Rods
Define accommodation
Contraction of ciliary body muscles to change lens shape to move focal points anteriorly to focus on near objects
The outermost tunic of the eyeball has two regions: In the front, it is clear, forming the _____. The other areas are white, and form the _____.
Cornea, Sclera
What do photoreceptors do?
Detect light and transducer it inside into a nerve signal
In dimly lit areas, the pupil will dilate/contract
Dilate
What are the types of vision?
Emmetropia, Hyperopia, Myopia, Presbyopia, Astigmation
The outer muscles on the eye are called the _______ muscles. They are skeletal muscles that control voluntary eye movements such as looking left, looking right, etc.
External
Define presbyopia (old vision)
Eye can focus on far objects but not near objects because the lens has become hard and inflexible (progressive)
Define myopia (near-sighted)
Eye can focus on near objects but not far objects because the lens shape has changed such that all focal points are abnormally anterior
In a relaxed eye, the lens focuses far/near (circle one) objects on the retina.
Far
Where are the far and near focal points if the CB is relaxed and has Hyperopia?
Far: Behind retina, Near: Way Behind retina
Where are the far and near focal points if the CB is relaxed and has Myopia?
Far: In front of retina, Near: On retina
Where are the far and near focal points if the CB is contracted and has Emmetropia?
Far: In front retina, Near: On retina
Where are the far and near focal points if the CB is contracted and has Hyperopia?
Far: On retina, Near: Behind retina
Where are the far and near focal points if the CB is relaxed and has Emmetropia?
Far: On retina, Near: Behind retina
Where are the far and near focal points if the CB is contracted and has Myopia?
Far: Way in front of retina, Near: In front of retina
The optic nerve is composed of axons extending from the ____ cells in the retina
Ganglion
In order to be absorbed by photoreceptors, light must actually pass through the _____ layer and the ____ layer of the retina.
Ganglion cell, Bipolar cell
The retina has three sub-layers. The cells of the three layers (from anterior-most to posterior-most) are called ______, _______, and _______.
Ganglion cells, Bipolar cells, Photoreceptor cells
The retina has three layers of nervous tissue. Which is the correct order of the retina's layers, from anterior to posterior?
Ganglion cells, Bipolar cells, Photoreceptors
Astigmatism is caused by a defect (non-smooth area) in the ______ or the __
Lens, Cornea
Color blindness is more common in which sex?
Males
The visual disorder where near objects can be focused but far objects can't is sometimes called "near sighted", but the correct term for the condition is ______.
Myopia
_____ is nearsightedness: All focal points are anterior/posterior (circle one) compared to where they normally are found.
Mypoia, Anterior (forward)
Contracting the ciliary body of an eye results in focusing far/near (circle one) objects on the retina.
Near
Name the test you performed in lab to measure how close an object could be and still be focused.
Near point accommodation
When a visual pigment molecule in a photoreceptor cell is hit by light, this results in the photoreceptor cell generating a _______.
Nerve signal
Define Emmetropia
Normal vision (far objects and near objects can be focused)
If a person with hyperopia is looking at a far object and their ciliary body is contracted, the focal point of the object will fall in front of/on/behind (circle one of the three) the retina.
On
If a person with myopia is looking at a near object and their ciliary body is relaxed, the focal point of the object will fall in front of/on/behind (circle one of the three) the retina.
On
The axons of the retinal ganglion cells run along the surface of the retina then they become bundled together, pass through the back of the eye, and connect to the brain. This bundle of axons is called the _____.
Optic nerve
The function of the lens of the eye is to
Serve as the major site of focusing of light rays
Each eye has how many extrinsic (external) muscles to move the eyeball? ______
Six
Define ciliary body
Smooth muscle attached to the lens for accommodation
Describe lens
Soft gel material, Flexible
What do the numbers 20/30 mean for visual acuity?
The 20 is the distance that the patient stood from and the 30 is the distance an average person could read that line
Define Visual acuity
The ability of the eye to form sharp in-focus images
Define Accommodation
The ciliary body muscles changing the shape of the lens to move all focal points forward to focus on near objects
Describe how, in the normal functioning of the eye, the shape of the lens is changed, and use this information to explain how images are kept in focus on the retina as a distant object is brought closer to the eyes.
The ciliary body muscles, which surround the lens of the eye, can change the shape of the lens. When a person is looking at a far object, the ciliary body muscles are relaxed and the lens' shape is such that it focuses far object onto the retina. When a person looks at a near object, the ciliary body muscles contract. This changes the shape of the lens such that near objects are focused onto the retina
What makes up the outer tunic?
The cornea and the sclera
The eye wall is composed of three layers, which are called "_____."
Tunics
The wall of the eye has three layers called _______.
Tunics
What is the name of the "letters chart"?
Visual acuity test using the Snellen eye chart
Define Adaptation
When a sense organ stops responding to a stimulus when it has been over stimulated by that stimulus
Describe Sclera
White dense connective tissue
Define pupil
Hole to let light into the eye
The vision problem __________ occurs when the focal point of the lens is deeper than (behind) the retina.
Hyperopia
The visual disorder where far objects can be focused but near objects can't is sometimes called "far sighted", but the correct term for the condition is ______.
Hyperopia
Which disorder (hyperopia or myopia) is the one where the person can see far objects but not near objects?
Hyperopia
____ is farsightedness: all focal points are anterior/posterior (circle one) compared to where they normally are found.
Hyperopia, Posterior (deep)
If a person with myopia is looking at a far object and their ciliary body is relaxed, the focal point of the object will fall in front of/on/behind (circle one of the three) the retina
In front of
If a person with myopia is looking at a near object and their ciliary body is contracted, the focal point of the object will fall in front of/on/behind (circle one of the three) the retina.
In front of
Explain the reason for blurred vision in a person with myopia, and describe how this person's vision is improved by the lenses in a pair of glasses.
In myopia, the shape of the lens has changed such that the focal points of all objects are abnormally forward in the eye. To correct this problem, glasses (or contact lenses) are worn that move all focal points backward
The colorful part of the eye (the part that can be brown, blue, gray, or green) is called the ______.
Iris
In the front of the eye, the _______ is the pigmented area surrounding the pupil. Its purpose is to _________.
Iris, Control the size of the pupil (to regulate the amount of light entering the eye)
The _____ is the clear part of the eye that focuses light images on the retina. Many patients benefit from having it re-shaped with a laser to correct myopia, hyperopia, or astigmatism.
Lens
The retina generates a nerve signal when it is struck by light. Use the numbers 1 - 5 to indicate in what order the nerve signal passes through the following structures: Optic nerve: ____ Ganglion cell: ____ Visual area of cerebrum: ___ Photoreceptor cell: ____ Bipolar cell: ____
Optic nerve = 4 Ganglion cell = 3 Visual area of cerebrum = 5 Photoreceptor cell = 1 Bipolar cell = 2
Define astigmatism
Parts of the field of vision are in focus but other parts are out of focus due to a defeat (non-smooth region) on lens or cornea
Rods and cones are sensory cells that respond to light. Together, they are called _____ cells.
Photoreceptor
_____ are neurons that sense light energy; they are found in the retina.
Photoreceptor cells
What cells make up the retina?
Photoreceptor cells, Bipolar cells, and Ganglion cells
Define iris
Pigmented smooth muscle that controls the size of the pupil
Light enters the interior of the eye through a small hole called the ______.
Pupil
If you stare at a blue-green colored dot for 30 seconds and then look at a white piece of paper, you will see a colorful after-image of the dot a) What color will the after-image be?
Red
What are the three types of color-sensing photoreceptors (what colors)? ____, ____, and ____.
Red, Blue, Green
In innermost tunic contains the sensory neurons that transduce light into nerve signals. This tunic is called the _______.
Retina
The _____ is the innermost tunic of the three eye wall tunics.
Retina
Define inner tunic
Retina/Nervous tissue, Detects light and transducers light into nerve signals
What are the two types of photoreceptor cells?
Rods and cones
What do the external eye muscles do? In what ways are they different from the other eye muscles (the iris and the ciliary body)?
The external eye muscles move the eye up, down, left, right, and diagonally. In other words, they control what direction the eye is looking. They are different from the eye muscles of the iris and ciliary body in that the external muscles are skeletal (voluntary) mucles, whereas the iris and ciliary body muscles are smooth (involuntary) muscles
Define emmetropia (normal vision)
The eye can focus on far objects and near by accommodation
Define hyperopia (far-sighted)
The eye can focus on far objects but not on near objects because the lens shape has changed such that all focal points are abnormally posterior
Define visual acuity
The eyes ability to form a sharp in-focus image
Which muscles of the eye are smooth muscles?
The iris and the ciliary body are smooth muscles. (The external eye muscles are skeletal muscles, not smooth muscles)
Within the retina
The photoreceptors synapse directly with the bipolar cells
If you stare at a blue-green colored dot for 30 seconds and then look at a white piece of paper, you will see a colorful after-image of the dot. b) Explain briefly (2-3 sentences) what causes this phenomena:
There are three cone types of photoreceptor cells in the retina: Blue, green, and red. If a person stares at a blue-green dot for a long period of time, the blue and green cones undergo "adaptation, " which means they temporarily stop responding to the stimulus they normally detect (blue and green light, in this case). When the person starts to look at a white piece of paper (which normally stimulates all three cones types) the blue and green cones are not stimulated (because they are still undergoing adaptation). The only cones that respond, therefore, are the red cones. This produces a red after image of the dot
Explain (in two or three sentences) what is the anatomical reason that we have a blind spot. In other words, what is at that spot instead of light-detecting cells?
There are three layers of neurons in the retina of the eye. The ganglion cells are the last group of neurons in the retina to receive the nerve signal when light is detected. The axons of the ganglion cells bundle together and then the bundle of axons (which is the optic nerve) passes through the back wall of the eye. At the location where the optic nerve passes through the back of the eye, the nerve takes up all the room so there is no room left for photoreceptor cells, and therefore no light can be detected at that location of the retina.