No. Normally human eyeballs have their pupils behind their iris so that the eye can adjust to light but fish eyes have their pupils protruding through the iris so that it cannot adjust its eyes to light.
Human eyes have a fovea, which is a high-density area of cones allowing for detailed central vision. Fish eyes lack a fovea and have a different structure with a higher proportion of rods, which are more sensitive to light but less precise in detail. Additionally, human eyes have a lens that can change shape to focus on objects at different distances, while fish eyes typically have a fixed lens.
the human eye and frog eye are both socketed, meaning they do not protrude from the skull. They are different in that the human eye is more advanced than the frog's eye in various ways as it is connected to the brain. Frogs are not colour-blind, they actually have colour reception about as great as a human's. I don't know the above reasoning but want to add here that "Basic difference between a Human and Frog eye is that a human eye can detect the picture (scene) with out any movement (or phase change) as well as the movement while a Frog's eye is blind for a still picture and only detects a phase change" Also, because frogs have small brains, they base their decisions on reactions occurring in the eye and not the brain, which is how humans make decisions. e.g: If you hang a fly in front of a frog without any movement, then there is no reaction from the frog but when you give a very small movement that is a phase change, the Frog at once detect it and then attack on the fly. By: M. Saad Shahid and J.C. http://saad.universalcoders.com
FSH ! Because You Remove The "I" Get It, The Fish Has No Eye....You Take Out The "I" As In "Eye"
The "Blind Cave Fish" (Astyanax jordani) has no eyes.
They are right above your eyes.
a fish never closes its eyes
yes you can eat the fish's eye
a fish
they both see
The eye can stop seeing if you go blind. Fish can't close their eyes because they don't have eye lids (exception to some sharks) to close them with.
Using fish eyes on human subjects in scientific research can pose several potential risks and consequences. These may include allergic reactions, infections, and potential damage to the human eye. Additionally, there may be ethical concerns regarding the use of animal tissues on human subjects. It is important to carefully consider these risks and consequences before conducting any research involving fish eyes on human subjects.
Koi fish usually have two eyes.