Retina.
no. they are called eyes. photoreceptors are cells within the eye that respond to light such as cones and rods.
Retina
retina
retina
The retina, which is located on the inner posterior portion of the eye, contains photoreceptors called rods and cones. These photoreceptors are responsible for detecting and converting light into electrical signals that are then sent to the brain for visual processing.
The retina in the eye contains millions of photoreceptors known as rods and cones. These photoreceptors are responsible for converting light into electrical signals that the brain can interpret as vision.
The special sense that relies on photoreceptors is vision. Photoreceptors in the retina of the eye, called rods and cones, help convert light into electrical signals that the brain interprets as images.
The optic disc or blind spot is where optic nerve leaves the back of the eye. There are no photoreceptors (rods/cones) in that area.
Light
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.
Yes the eye-spots have photoreceptors used to avoid light.
The transparent inner neural layer of the RETINA