Human Eye
Human Eye
External
layer
Intermediate
layer
Cornea
Iris
(in anterior)
(in anterior)
Sclera
Ciliary body
(in posterior)
(in anterior)
Choroid
(in posterior)
Internal layer
(=sensory part of the eye)
External Layer
(cornea and sclera)
Sclera:
It is the white part of the eye sphere
(=eye ball) and its function is to
protect the eye from external
effects.
Sclera is continuous with the cornea
at the anterior portion of the eye.
It is composed of fibrous connective
tissue.
Sclera
Cornea
Cornea:
Cornea is the visible transparent
portion of the eye sphere that
covers both eye pupil and iris.
Cornea is the first and the most
powerful lens of the optical system
of the eye and allows, together with
the lens, the production of a sharp
image at the retina.
Formation of an image
on retina
Flying Gecko
Fruit Bat
Owl
CORNEA IMPLANTATION
1-Old Cornea
Tarsier
The tarsier of
Southeast Asia
has the largest
eyes relative to
body size of any
living creature.
The eyes are so
enormous that
they cannot be
moved in their
sockets. To
compensate,
tarsiers can
swivel their
necks 180
degrees in
either direction.
Though most nocturnal primates eat insects, the tarsier likes meat and
has the vision, speed and reflexes to catch small prey in pitch darkness
Intermediate Layer
Iris:
It is a colored smooth circular
muscle, which is beautifully
pigmented, giving us the color of our
eyes.
The central aperture of the iris is
known as pupil, so that more or less
light, depending on the conditions, is
allowed to enter the eye.
Diaphragm
Similarities
1
aperture
refract light
pupil
iris muscles control size of pupil
mainly cornea ;
lens, aqueous & vitreous humor
focusing mechanism
Albinism: About one in every 17,000 people have Albinism. These individuals fail to produce melanin,
a photoprotective pigment. While melanin's role in protecting us from ultraviolet light is understood,
it also has other important functions in the development of the retina and brain and their
interconnection of which we know much less..
Albino animals
Ciliary body
Choroid:
It is the portion
between the sclera
and the retina at
the posterior.
It is rich in blood
vessels and provides
the nutrition of the
eye.
It also prevents the
internal reflection
of the light due to
its brown color.
Internal Layer
(retina)
Retina:
It contains the photoreceptor cells that
capture light energy. These cells are of
two types, named because of their
shapes, rods and cones.
A schematic diagram of the
retina of the vertebrate eye.
Light (indicated here by the
yellow arrows entering from
the left) must pass through
several layers of cells to reach
the photoreceptors (the rods
and the cones) at the back of
the eye. Signals from the
photoreceptor cells (indicated
by the red arrows) are then
transmitted
through
the
bipolar cells to the ganglion
cells, whose axons converge to
become the optic nerve. Other
neurons in the retina, known as
horizontal and amacrine cells,
also
participate
in
the
elaborate transmission paths.
Some processing of information
occurs in these pathways
before nerve impulses leave
the retina.
Horizontal,
bipolar and
amacrine cells
A section through the retina of the vertebrate eye. In this scanning electron
micrograph, the rods have been colored orange and cones yellow. The other
cells in the micrograph (=shown in pink) are horizontal cells, bipolar cells, and
amacrine cells, all of which play a role in the processing of information
transmitted by the rods and the cones.
Rods are responsible for night vision, cones for color vision.
Rods do not provide a great degree of resolution as cones do,
but they are more light-sensitive than cones.
Dim light does not stimulate the cones, but stimulate the rods.
Maybe that is why we see the world colorless at night.
Day vision
Night
vision
The area of
retina in which
the sharpest
image is formed
is known as
fovea.
In the fovea
the
photoreceptor
cells consists
entirely of
closely packed
cones. These
cones make one
to one
connection with
bipolar and
ganglion cells.
Anterior Chamber
Vitreous Chamber
Posterior Chamber
Aqueous Humor fills
these cavities
1) Orbit
6) Tear apparatus
7) Muscles
known
as accommodation. Accommodation is achieved by
two methods;
Eye Defects
Important Note:
Snellen chart,
illustrative only
not suitable for
vision testing
2) Hypermetropia:
3) Astigmatism:
This describes the condition where
the image is constantly unclear due
to nonuniformity of the cornea.
This defect can be corrected by
wearing cylindrical edged glasses.
cylindrical
edged glasses.
Contact lens
Vision with
astigmatic eyes
4) Cataract:
It is the result of a loss in the transparency of the
lens of an eye. In cataract, the lens becomes opaque.
Cataract is treated by the replacement of a new lens
either from a donor or with a synthetic one.
If the opaque areas in the lens increase they may
cause loss in vision or blindness.
5) Prestism:
Due to aging, the elasticity of the lens is lost.
Normally, a young individual can see an object normally
from 10-15 cm. distance normally. As the individual
ages, this distance increases to 40-80 cm.
This disorder can be corrected by wearing glasses with
convex lenses.
Cross section
of the retina:
A-Rods
B-Cones
C-Cell nuclei
of cone cells
Ishihara`s color
blindness test book
Normal eye
83
37
Someone who is
tritanopic might not
be able to see this
number.
56