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3.2: Retina, rods and cones

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    128455
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    Usually, light is focussed to form a real, inverted image on the retina. In the retina, light is absorbed by photoreceptor cells, which, via retinal neural cells, produce binary electrical pulses (action potentials) in the optic nerve. Rod cells respond to all wavelengths and so give maximal sensitivity. Cone cells of three types, maximally sensitive to red, green and blue, provide colour vision, to which we return later. Some signal processing occurs in neural cells in the retina. 

    Learning Objectives
    • Photons -> photoreceptors in retina -> retinal neural cells -> action potentials.
    • Three types of cone cell for colour vision. Rod cells respond to all visible wavelengths.
    • The optic nerve and the blind spot.

     

     

    Table \(\PageIndex{1}\)
    Links to related material  

    The eye: optics, anatomy and accommodation
    The eye and the camera: similarities and differences. Anatomy and focussing. Accommodation and reading glasses. Retinal anatomies. The blind spot. Image formation and analysis.

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    Complementary colours, after-images, retinal fatigue, colour mixing and contrast sensitivity
    After-images give complementary colour illusions due to retinal fatigue. Complementary colour charts. Demonstration of contrast sensitivity and lateral inhibition.

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    Colour mixing
    Colour mixing with additive primaries (RGB = Red Green Blue) and subtractive primaries (CYM = Cyan Yellow Magenta). Additive mixing using RGB monitors, projectors and Newton's colour wheel. Subtractive mixing using paints and filters.

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    The Eye: performance and compromises
    Photon capture efficiency, aperture and aberration, focal length, integration time/ exposure time/ frames per second, stereoscopic vision, angle of view.

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    Why vision?
    Why is the octave from 400 to 700 nm so important? Why so little UR and IV vision? A comparison of vision and hearing.

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    3.2: Retina, rods and cones is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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