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Chapter 4 Section 2

Chapter 4 Section 2. Vision Obj : Explain how the eye works to enable vision. Light.

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Chapter 4 Section 2

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  1. Chapter 4 Section 2 Vision Obj: Explain how the eye works to enable vision.

  2. Light Light is electromagnetic energy. It is described in wavelengths. Not all light is visible to humans. In fact, the light that humans can see makes up only a small part of the spectrum of electromagnetic energy. The wavelengths of cosmic rays are only a fraction of an inch long. The wavelengths of some radio waves extend for miles. The wavelengths of visible light are in between.

  3. You have probably seen sunlight broken down into colors as it filters through water vapor - that is what makes a rainbow. Sunlight can also be broken down into colors by means of a glass structure called a prism. The main colors of the spectrum, from longest to shortest wavelengths, are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. For generations, people have remembered the order by using the made-up name Roy G. Biv, which comes from using the first letter of each of the colors.

  4. The Eye Light enters the eye and then is projected onto a surface. The amount of light that enters is determined by the size of the opening in the colored part of the eye. This opening is called the pupil. When you look into someone’s eyes, the black circles you see in the middle are the pupils. They may look solid to you, but actually they are openings.

  5. The size of the pupil adjusts automatically to the amount of light entering the eye. Try going from bright light to dark and look at the way the pupils change. Pupil size is also sensitive to our emotions. We can be literally “wide-eyed with fear,” meaning that the pupils open widely when we are afraid.

  6. Once light has entered the eye, it encounters the lens. The lens adjusts to the distance of objects by changing its thickness. Hold a finger at arm’s length and then bring it slowly toward your nose. You will feel tension in the eye as the thickness of the lens adjusts to keep the finger in focus. When people squint to look at something, they are adjusting the thickness of the lenses in their eyes.

  7. These changes project a clear image of the object onto the retina. The retina is the sensitive surface in the eye that acts like the film in a camera. However, the retina consists of neurons-not film. Neurons that are sensitive to light are called photoreceptors. Once the light hits the photoreceptors, a nerve carries the visual input to the brain. In the brain, the information is relayed to the visual area of the occipital lobe.

  8. The Blind Spot – When light hits the point where the optic nerve leaves the eye, the eye registers nothing because that area lacks photoreceptors. Thus it is called the blind spot. We all have one. If we did not, we would never be able to “see” anything-no visual input would reach the brain through the optic nerve for interpretation.

  9. Rods and Cones – There are two kinds of photoreceptors: rods and cones. Rods are sensitive only to the brightness of light. They allow us to see in black and white. They allow us to see in black and white. Cones provide color vision. Rods are more sensitive to light than are cones. Therefore, as the lighting grows dim objects lose their color before their outlines fade from view.

  10. Dark and light Adaptation – When your eyes adjust to the dark, this adjustment to lower lighting is called dark adaptation. Your ability to see in low light continues to improve for up to 45 minutes. But, when you turn the light on, you adapt quickly. Adaptation to bright light happens much more quickly than adaptation to the dark.

  11. Visual Acuity – The sharpness of vision is called visualacuity. Visual acuity is determined by the ability to see visual details (in normal light). When people have their eyes examined, they have to read the letters on a chart. This is the Snellen Vision Chart. It is used to measure visual acuity.

  12. If you were to stand 20 feet from the Snellen Chart and could only read the E, we would say that your vision is 20/100. This means that what a person with normal vision could see no more than 20 feet away. In such a case, you would be nearsighted-you would have to be particularly close to an object to make out its details. A person who is farsighted, on the other hand, needs to be farther away from an object than a person with normal vision to see it clearly.

  13. Color Vision The world is a place of brilliant colors – the blue of the sky, the reds and yellow of autumn leaves. The wavelength of light determines the color. People with normal color vision see any color in the spectrum of visible light. But what about animals? You may be surprised to find out that dogs and cats see far fewer colors than you do but that insects, birds, fish, and reptiles experience a wide variety of colors.

  14. The Color Circle – The color circle is the colors of the spectrum bent into a circle. The colors across from each other are called complementary. For example, red and green are a complementary pair. If we mix complementary colors together, they form gray. You may have learned in art class that mixing blue and yellow creates green, not gray. But this is true only with pigments, or substances such as crayons or paints. Here we are talking about light, not about pigments.

  15. Cones and Color Vision – Cones, one of the two types of photoreceptors in the retina of the eye, enable us to perceive color. Some cones are sensitive to blue, some to green, and some to red. When more than one kind of cone is stimulated at the same time, we perceive other colors of the spectrum, such as yellow and violet. TV’s work the same way. The images you see on a TV actually consist of thousands of very small dots, called pixels. Each of these dots is either blue, green, or red-the same colors that are perceived by the different types of cones in the eye. There are no yellow, purple, or even black or white dots in the TV images. These and other colors are created only through various combinations of blue, green, and red dots.

  16. Afterimages – Look at the strangely colored flag for at least half a minute. Then look at the white board. What do you see? If your color vision is working properly and if you looked at the flag long enough, you should see a normal flag. This is an afterimage of the first flag. The afterimage of a color is its complementary color. You perceive an afterimage when you have viewed a color for a while and then the color is removed. The same holds true for black and white. Starting at one will create an afterimage of the other.

  17. Color Blindness If you can see the colors of the visible spectrum, you have normal color vision. People who do not have normal color vision are said to be “color blind”. These people are partially or totally unable to distinguish color due to an absence of, or malfunction in, the cones. People who are totally color blind are sensitive only to light and dark and see the world as most people do on a black-and-white television set. Total color blindness is rare.

  18. Partial color blindness, on the other hand, is fairly common. People who are partially color blind see some colors but not others. Particularly common is red-green color blindness, in which a person has difficulty seeing shapes of red and green.

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