Macula - Wikipedia The macula is the central part of the retina of the human eye, its center slightly shifted to the temporal side (The location in the image is misleading: it looks as if the macula were far removed from the center which is not the case )
Macula: What It Is, Anatomy Function - Cleveland Clinic What is the macula? The macula is the part of your eye that processes what you see directly in front of you (your central vision) It’s part of your retina and is key to your vision
Macula - American Academy of Ophthalmology The macula is a small but important area in the center of the retina You need the macula to clearly see details of objects in front of you, like faces and written text
Clinical anatomy of the macula - PMC The macula is located at the center of the retina and is crucial for high-resolution color vision Its complex anatomical structure supports a dense array of cone photoreceptors and specialized neuronal pathways essential for central vision
The Macula: What It Is, What Can Go Wrong With It, and How to Protect It The macula creates central vision, processing objects that we see in front of us Like the rest of the retina, the macula consists mostly of cells known as photoreceptors that take in and change light into electrical signals
What is the macula? Why is it important? - Macular Society The macula is part of the retina at the back of the eye It’s a round, yellow spot that has a slight oval shape and is only about 5mm across, but is responsible for our central vision, most of our colour vision and the fine detail of what we see
Macula Lutea - All About Vision The macula lutea — more commonly called the macula — is the most sensitive spot in the center of the light-sensitive retina in the back of the eye The macula is responsible for visual acuity, central vision and color vision
The Macula Society | Since 1977 Founded in 1977, the Macula Society is a forum for new research in retinal vascular and macular diseases Membership is by application, with acceptance criteria including extensive contribution to retinal literature