BI110 Chapter Notes - Chapter 83, 85: Retinal Pigment Epithelium, Retina Horizontal Cell, Ganglion Cell

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Photoreception is possible because specialized electromagnetic receptors called photoreceptors are able to detect light. Photoreceptors contain pigments that change shape when they are struck by a photon of light, which triggers a neural response. Vertebrates and many invertebrates such as some mollusks, worms, jellyfish, and spiders have single-lens eyes, or simple eyes. In many single-lens eyes, light enters through a small opening called the pupil. An iris contracts or expands to adjust the amount of light entering the pupil. A lens refracts, or bends, the light so that it hits the retina, the region of the eye that contains photoreceptor cells. In invertebrates, the lens moves back and forth to focus the image. In vertebrates, the lens changes shape to focus the image. The photoreceptor cells on the retina send signals through the optic nerve to the brain. The human eye consists of multiple layers. The sclera is connective tissue that covers the eye.

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