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retina
The retina (rods and cones) senses the light and sends the information to the brain to be processed and perceived.
The organ of vision is the retina of the eye. The sensory receptors are called photoreceptors. When photoreceptors are stimulated, impulses travel within the optic nerve (CN II) to the visual (occipital) cortex of the brain for interpretation. There are two types of photoreceptors: Cones are photoreceptors for color vision and produce sharp images while the Rods are photoreceptors for night vision and produce silhouettes of images.
temporal lobe
The point at which the optic nerve enters the eye and forms part of the retina, it can viewed via the pupil with specialist equipment.
Retina
It sends the message to your brain of what your seeing
It sends the message to your brain of what your seeing
It sends the message to your brain of what your seeing
It sends the message to your brain of what your seeing
The Optic Nerve
The retina detects light and the optical nerve sends the signal to the brain.
The optic nerve
By the optic nerve, which is connected to the brain. The optic nerves takes nerve signals from the retina and sends it to the brain.
well the Eye sends the picture to the brain in not even a billisecond and the brain then tells you what it is so its really both are helping each other.
That nerve comes out from behind the eye-ball.
the iris finds and detects images and sends them to the brain