Examples of retina in the following topics:
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- However, light does not enter the retina unaltered; it must first pass through other layers that process it so that it can be interpreted by the retina .
- Presbyopia occurs because the image focuses behind the retina.
- (b) A blowup shows the layers of the retina.
- The retina contains photoreceptive cells.
- Rods and cones are photoreceptors in the retina.
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- There is, however, one subtle difference: the cephalopod eye is "wired" in the opposite direction, with blood and nerve vessels entering from the back of the retina, rather than the front as in vertebrates .
- In the vertebrate version the nerve fibers pass in front of the retina, and there is a blind spot (4) where the nerves pass through the retina.
- In the octopus version, the eye is constructed the "right way out," with the nerves attached to the rear of the retina.
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- Light is tranduced in rods and cones; visual information is processed in the retina before entering the brain.
- A large degree of processing of visual information occurs in the retina itself, before visual information is sent to the brain.
- Photoreceptors in the retina continuously undergo tonic activity.
- Exposure of the retina to light hyperpolarizes the rods and cones, removing the inhibition of their bipolar cells.
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- Another important visual route is a pathway from the retina to the superior colliculus in the midbrain, where eye movements are coordinated and integrated with auditory information.
- Finally, there is the pathway from the retina to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus.
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- Neurons usually have one or two axons, but some neurons, like amacrine cells in the retina, do not contain any axons.