idfk thats what i want to know
the eye receives visual images from our surroundings, these images are received by the cones and rods which are on the retina which is found in the eye, the images are translated (by the cones and rods) and sent as impulses to the brain through the optic nerve, the brain is then able to inter-prate these impulses into images we see.
The term is "optic disc" or "optic nerve head." This is the point in the eye where the optic nerve exits and carries visual information to the brain.
The optic nerve, also known as cranial nerve II, connects the eye to the brain. It transmits visual information from the retina to the visual cortex in the brain, allowing for the perception of images. The optic nerve is essential for vision and plays a crucial role in processing visual stimuli.
The natural blind spot (scotoma) is due to lack of receptors (rods or cones) where the optic nerve and blood vessels leave the eye. It is where the optic nerve leaves the retina not enter it. The optic disk or blind spot is where the optic nerve leaves the eye; you cannot use that field of vision because the optic nerve is there.
Optic Nerve
Light is captured by photoreceptor cells in the retina at the back of the eye, where it is converted into electrical signals. These signals are then sent along the optic nerve to the brain for processing and interpretation as visual images.
The optic nerve carries signals (images) from the retina to the brain.
Impulses leave the eye by way of the optic nerve, which transmits visual information from the retina to the brain for processing. The optic nerve is a bundle of nerve fibers that carries these signals to the brain, allowing us to perceive and interpret the images we see.
The optic nerve is in the eye (optical, Optical illusions)
The optic nerve exits the retina at the optic disc, otherwise known as the "blind spot".
Images are carried to the brain by the optic nerve. This nerve transmits visual information from the eye to the brain, specifically to the visual cortex in the occipital lobe. This allows the brain to process and interpret the images we see.
Images being projected onto the human eye are first flipped upon refraction of the lens and then projected onto the retina. The images is then sent via through the optic nerve (Cranial Nerve II) to the optic chiasma. This is where the images are then "crossed" so that the brain processes the appropriate information for each eye's visual field (so the eye corresponds images in left eye with the left side of the body).
the eye receives visual images from our surroundings, these images are received by the cones and rods which are on the retina which is found in the eye, the images are translated (by the cones and rods) and sent as impulses to the brain through the optic nerve, the brain is then able to inter-prate these impulses into images we see.
the optic nerve
your optic nerve attatches your eye and brain together
The optic nerve
The term is "optic disc" or "optic nerve head." This is the point in the eye where the optic nerve exits and carries visual information to the brain.