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- Eyes: How They Work, Anatomy Common Conditions
Your eyes are the sensory organs that allow you to see Your eyes capture visible light from the world around you and turn it into a form your brain uses to create your sense of vision
- Eye - Wikipedia
Compound eyes are made up of multiple small visual units, and are common on insects and crustaceans Non-compound eyes have a single lens and focus light onto the retina to form a single image This type of eye is common in mammals, including humans The simplest eyes are pit eyes
- Human eye | Definition, Anatomy, Diagram, Function, Facts - Britannica
human eye, in humans, specialized sense organ capable of receiving visual images, which are then carried to the brain The eye is protected from mechanical injury by being enclosed in a socket, or orbit, which is made up of portions of several of the bones of the skull to form a four-sided pyramid, the apex of which points back into the head
- Ultimate Guide to Human Eye Anatomy: Parts, Names Diagrams
Compound eyes, found in insects, have many small visual units Non-compound eyes, like those in mammals, including humans, have one lens and form a single image on the retina
- What the Parts of the Eye Are Called and How They Work
Learn what each part of the eye is called, what it does, and how they all work together to turn light into the images you see
- Eye Anatomy: Parts of the Eye and How We See
Here is a tour of the eye starting from the outside, going in through the front and working to the back The eye sits in a protective bony socket called the orbit Six extraocular muscles in the orbit are attached to the eye These muscles move the eye up and down, side to side, and rotate the eye
- Eyes: Structure, function, and disease - Medical News Today
The eyes are complex organs In this article, we look at their anatomy and how they work, and we describe some conditions that affect the eyes
- What Are the Parts of the Eye? Eye Anatomy Explained
It is the tissue lying behind the cornea that gives the eye its color (e g blue eyes) and controls the amount of light entering the eye by varying the size of the pupillary opening
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