- How does the human eye see?
- How does the eyeball work?
- Many animals besides humans use vision. Are there any animals thatdo not have or use vision?
Two eyes are needed for "stereoscopic" or 3-D vision. Why do you think this is so?
Do all animals that see have two eyes?
Connections
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1. Many animals besides humans use vision. Are there any animals that do not have or use vision? 2. Two eyes are needed for "stereoscopic" or 3-D vision. Why do you think this is so? Do all animals that see have two eyes? Why are some animals' eyes on the side of the head rather than in the front?
Vocabulary
Try This
Overview
Look around. What do you see? Human beings can obtain a large amount of information about the surrounding environment through their sense of vision. But to see, we need light and the light-processing organs called eyeballs. The outside of an eyeball is white, except for the clear, bulging cornea in front. Just behind the cornea is the iris, a colored area with a hole in the center called the pupil. Circular muscle tissue in the iris allows it to open and close the pupil to regulate the amount of light that gets inside the eyeball. Just behind the iris and pupil is the lens. The cornea and the lens work together to focus images on the retina, the light-sensitive layer that lines the inside of the eyeball. Light moves in straight lines. Whenever a light ray encounters a surface of a different transparent medium, however, it bends (refracts) and heads off in another direction. The amount of bending depends on the nature of the transparent substance, the angle at which the light hits the surface, and the color of the light. On a curved surface such as a lens, parallel rays of light will hit the surface at different angles and will be bent differently. A greater curvature will lead to a greater difference in the amount of bending. When your eye focuses on an object, all the light rays from a single point on that object are bent toward a single point on your retina. In the eyeball, light rays passing through the cornea are bent by its curvature toward the pupil. The lens flexes to change its curvature and finish the focusing process. Interestingly, the image projected on the retina is upside down because of the way the rays of light are bent by a double-convex lens. On the retina are two kinds of cells that change light into nerve impulses. Rod cells do not see color but are best for night viewing because they react to very low light levels. Cone cells are for color viewing. They work best in good light and are found mostly in the center of the retina?an area called the macula, which provides the sharpest vision. Within each eye is a small blind spot with no rods or cones, where the optic nerve is attached to the eyeball. The optic nerve collects the nerve impulses and carries them to the brain, which interprets them as an image.Activity
As an object approaches, the human eye's lens flexes to focus on it. Eventually the object gets so close, however, that the lens can no longer focus on it. Then the object begins to blur. How close can you bring an object before it looks blurry? Does this distance vary for different people or age groups? Does the shape or color of the object make any difference? Does it matter how brightly the object is illuminated? Materials- a 2.5-cm x 5-cm (1"x 2") swatch of printed words from a newspaper or magazine
- modeling clay or sculpting compound
- a 3" x 5" index card
- a cloth or soft vinyl tape measure like those used in sewing (CAUTION: Do not use any sharp or pointed objects, including wooden or plastic rulers, since these materials will be held close to students' faces.)
- What is the average distance where the image begins to blur for all test subjects? Is the average distance larger or smaller for people who wear glasses? Is it larger or smaller for one eye or both eyes? Is the distance the same for both eyes of the same person?
- Can you design another experiment that tests how wide a person's field of vision is? How large an arc the blind spot covers?
Resources
- Minnaert, M.G.J. (1993) Light and Color in the Outdoors. (Translated
and
revised by L. Seymour.) New York: Springer-Verlag.
Parker, S. (1989) The eye and seeing. In the Human Body series. New
York:
Franklin Watts.
Simon, H. (1983) Sight and seeing: A world of light and color. New
York:
Philomel Books.
American Science and Surplus
3605 Howard St
Skokie, IL 60076
(847) 982-0870
(lenses and other optic equipment)
Flinn Scientific, Inc.
PO Box 219
Batavia, IL 60510-0219
(800) 452-1261
(science equipment for schools)
An index to vision sites is available at "vision science"
"http://vision.arc.nasa.gov/VisionScience/VisionScience.html">
http://vision.arc.nasa.gov/VisionScience/VisionScience.html







