thedwrrffretjyk
The brain is connected to the eyes by the optic nerve. This nerve carries visual information from the retina of the eye to the brain, where it is processed to create our sense of vision.
Nerve cells are difficult to see because they are often very thin and have complex structures that are densely packed in the brain and nervous system. Additionally, nerve cells do not readily stain with conventional laboratory techniques, making them hard to visualize under a microscope.
The optic nerve, or cranial nerve II, is responsible for visual functioning and carries visual information from the eyes to the brain.
no they are not
Messages are carried from the eyes to the brain by the optic nerve. The optic nerve is responsible for transmitting visual information to the brain for processing and interpretation.
The eyes are connected to the brain by the optic nerve.
The eye cells transmit nerve impulses to the brain, which translates the signal and transmits nerve impulses to the muscles. Information from sensory organs, including the eyes, ears, tongue, and skin, are transmitted by nerve impulses directly to the brain. The brain acting as the control center of the body interprets the nerve impulses. It then sends out different nerve impulses to other cells of the body if a response to the sensory signals is needed.
The brain is connected to the eyes by the optic nerve. This nerve carries visual information from the retina of the eye to the brain, where it is processed to create our sense of vision.
It's connected to your muscles, you eyes (via optic nerve), your ears (via auditory nerve), your nose (via olfactory bulb), your mouth (for taste receptors on tongue), your skin (different types of touch receptors in the skin). Your brain is responsible for regulating most of what the body does, so it's connected to pretty much everything
The eyes "don't" see colour. The "brain" sees colour, the "eyes" are just "lenses", hun. k. the eyes have two types of nerve cells. rhods and cones. Rhods help see in dim light and cones help in identifing colors and help see in bright light. these 2 cells are called photoreceptor cells. they carry this info from the eye through the optic nerve to the brain. the answer to your question, cones are nerve cells in the eye that help distinguish colors. :)
The optic nerves carry the impulses from the eyes to the visual area of the thalamus.
The cells are alive and metabolically active.
The message from nerve cells in the eyes is transmitted through the optic nerve to the brain. The optic nerve carries this visual information to the brain's visual cortex, where it is processed and interpreted.
The sensory receptors for the eyes are the optic nerve and the retina. The sensory receptor for the nose are the olfactory nerves.
Nerve cells are difficult to see because they are often very thin and have complex structures that are densely packed in the brain and nervous system. Additionally, nerve cells do not readily stain with conventional laboratory techniques, making them hard to visualize under a microscope.
Each eye has one nerve for vision, the optic nerve, Cranial Nerve II. Nerves are actually bundles of many nerve fibers. There are nerves that supply impulses for the muscles associated with the eyeballs so they can move are the Cranial Nerve III, Oculomotor, Cranial Nerve IV, Trochlear, and Cranial Nerve VI, the Abducens nerve.
red blood cells muscle firbers reproductive cell (spem and ovum) cone cells in the eyes white blood cells such as eousinophills nerve cells such as neurones hair cells