1. List the five Special Senses: Smell Taste Sight Hearing Equilibrium.

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Transcript of 1. List the five Special Senses: Smell Taste Sight Hearing Equilibrium.

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1. List the five Special Senses:

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SmellTasteSight

HearingEquilibrium

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2. Explain how special sense receptors are arranged:

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Eyes and Ears

Large complex sensory organs.

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Taste buds and olfactory epithelium

Localized clusters of receptors

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3. What actually causes us to “feel” our world?

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“Our sensory inputs are OVERLAPPING! What we finally experience is a blending of stimulus effects.”

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4, Of all of the sensory receptors in the body,how many of them are in the eyes?

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5. How much of the adult eye can actually be seen?

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Where is the rest of the eye??

“Cushioned by fat, and tucked away within the walls of the bony orbit.”

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6. Label the following drawings of the eye:

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7.Identify the following External eye Structures

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Eye lids

Flaps of skin that close over the eye for protection.

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Eye Lashes

Grows from the borders of the eye lids, collects dust and debris and prevents it from entering the eye.

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Meibomin Glands

Modified sebaceous glands associated with the eyelid edges. Produces an oily secretion that lubricates the eye.

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Ciliary glands

Sweat glands that lie between the eye lashes.

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ConjunctivaDelicate membrane that lines the eyelids and covers part of the outer surface of the eyeball. Secretes mucus that lubricates the eyeball.

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Lacrimal Apparatus

Group structure consisting of the lacrimal glands, lacrimal ducts, and the lacrimal sacs.

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Lacrimal glands

Produces salty tears to wash the eye

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Lacrimal ducts

.Drains the tears into the lacrimal sac.

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Lacrimal Sac

Collects the tears from the lacrimal duct, and sends them to the nasolacrimal duct.

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Nasolacrimal duct

Transfers the tears from the lacrimal sac to the nasal cavity.

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8. Explain how the tears washes the eye:

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Washes the eye

Salt water flushes trash out of the eye.

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Protects the eye fromBacterial invasion

.

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Antibodies and an enzyme called LYSOZOME found in the tears destroys most bacteria that try to enter the body through the eyes.

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Causes Congestion And the Sniffles

.When tears spill over the eyelids and fill the nasal cavities.

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9. What is the importance of crying?

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Chemical Irritation

.Crying washes out the chemicals or dilutes it so that it doesn’t hurt as much.

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Emotional Tears

Relieves Stress

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10. Explain the role of the extrinsic muscles:

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A) These are 6 muscles that produce Gross eye movementsB) They make it possible for the eye to follow a moving object.

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11. Discuss the general anatomy of the eye:

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A- The eye ball is a HOLLOW SPHERE!

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B- Its wall is composed of three TUNICS .

(coats, coverings, layers)

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C- Its interior is filled with fluids called HUMORS.

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D- The lens, the main focusing apparatus of the eye, is supported upright within the eye cavity dividing the eye into two chambers.

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Tunic #1“The Sclera”

a- White part of eye

b- in the center of the sclera, is a crystal clear dome called the cornea.

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Tunic #2: “The Choroid Layer

a- Middle tunic, contains dark pigments to keep light from scattering.

b- Forms the colored part of the eye called the IRIS.

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Tunic # 3: The Retinaa- is sensory tunic found at the back of the eye.

b-Functions like a movie screen

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Tunic # 3: The Retinac- Lined with photoreceptors that are stimulated by the incoming light.

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13. Discuss the following diseases:

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Conjunctivitis

.bacterial infection of the Conjunctiva! Causes a diseases commonly called “Pink eye”

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Watery Eyes

Cold or nasal inflammation often causes the lacrimal mucosa to become inflamed and to swell. This impairs the drainage of tears from the eye surface.

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14. Identify the following structures of the internal anatomy of the eye

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15. Identify by function and / or location the following internal anatomical structures of the eye.

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CorneaTransparent window in the center of the sclera. Allows light to enter the eye. Acts like a “Windshield” over the pupil.

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Ciliary body

Two smooth muscle groups that holds and changes the shape of the lens.

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IrisColored part of the eye. A sphincter muscle that opens and shuts in order to allow a sufficient amount of light to enter the eye.

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Pupil

The opening in the center of the iris.

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Lens

A crystal biconvex structure used to focus incoming light..

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Aqueous humor

Liquid between the lens and the cornea wall.

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Vitreous humor

Gel between the lens and the retina wall.

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Retina

Back of the eye. Lined with photoreceptors

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Optic discSite where the optic nerve is attached to the eye. Called the blind spot because there are NO photoreceptors on that spot.

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Fovea Centralis

Found lateral to the blind spot, it is the point of sharpest vision because it contains only cones.

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16. Explain why the cornea is the only tissue in the body that can be transplanted from one person to another without fear of rejection:

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The cornea has no BLOOD VESSELS; therefore, it is beyond the reach of the immune system.

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17. Differentiate the two types of photoreceptors found on the retina:

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Rods:

a- Most dense at the edge of the retina and decreases in number

as the center is approached.

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Rods:

b- Allows us to see Black, White, and Gray tones.

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Rods:

c- Allows us to see in dim light and at night.

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Rods:

d- Gives us our peripheral vision, or

side vision.

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Cones:

More Cones are found at the center, and they get fewer as you moe to the edges.

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Cones:

Allow us to see in

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Cones:

Allow us to see in Bright Light!

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Cones:

Gives us our frontal vision.

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18. Describe the neural layer of the retina:

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a- light enters the eye and projects an upside down image on the retina.

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b- Rods and cones are stimulated by the light!

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c- Signal is transferred to the axons of ganglion cells that transfer the signal to the optic nerve.

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19. Describe the major types of neurons composing the retina:

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Rods and cones receive the incoming signal.

Transfers signal to:

Bipolar neurons which transfers it to:

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Ganglion cells of the optic nerve.

Optic nerve carries the impulse to the brain.

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Definition

Cannot see clearly at night or in dim light

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Body Malfunction?

Anything that interferes with the metabolic processes of the rods.

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Cause of Malfunction?

Lack of Vitamin “A” in our diet.

“Eat more carrots!”

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21. Differentiate the three types of cones:

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One type receives

blue!

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One type receives Green!

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One type receives

Red!

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22. Explain how we see intermediate colors:

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Impulses received at the same time from more than one type of cone by the visual cortex are interpreted as intermediate colors.

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Examples of intermediate color formation:

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1 2

Cone 1 sees Red

Cone 2 sees Blue

+

Brain sees Purple

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1 2

Cone 1 sees Red

Cone 2 sees Green

+

Brain sees Yellow

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1 2

All three cone types stimulated!+

Brain sees White

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1 2

No cone stimulation?

Brain sees Black!

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23. Explain color blindness:

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a) Lack of all three cone types? TOTAL COLOR BLIND

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B) Lack of 1 or 2 cone types? Partially color blind.

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c) Some people do not know that they are color blind, because they have never known the missing colors!

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d) Color blindness is genetically sex linked! Only MALES can be color blind.

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24.What is the role of the lens?

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To focus the incoming light onto the RETINA.

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25. What is a CATARACT?

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The soft flexible lens of our youth becomes hard and cloudy. The cataract must be surgically removed.

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26. Discuss the Aqueous humor:

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a) Clear watery fluid found in front of the lens. Similar to blood plasma.

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b) Continually secreted by a special area of the Choroid.

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c) Helps maintain pressure inside the eye

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d) Provides nutrients for the lens and cornea.

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e) The liquid of the aqueous humor is reabsorbed by the Canal of Schlemn and returned to the blood for recharging with nutrients and the removal of cellular waste.

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27. Discuss the Vitreous humor:

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a)Ball of jelly BEHIND the lens!

b)Prevents the eyeball from collapsing.

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28. Disease Glaucoma

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What?

Pressure inside the eye increases dramatically and begins to compress the retina and optic nerve. Causing pain and possible blindness.

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Why?

Glaucoma begins slowly as the drainage of the aqueous humor becomes blocked.

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Symptoms:

At first nothing!

Later signs include seeing halos around lights. Headache and blurred vision.

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Test:

Uses a machine called a TONOMETER to measure the internal eye pressure.

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Treatment?

Eye drops. Occasionally, surgery to enlarge the drainage channel.

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29. Discuss how the emmetropic eye focuses the light:

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a)NORMAL EYE!

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b) Light passes into the eye, is focused by the lens, and the focal point is projected directly on the retina.

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c) Image is clear and in focus!

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29. Discuss how the Myopic eye focuses the light:

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a) NEARSIGHTED!

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B) Light passes into the eye, is focused by the lens, but the focal point is IN FRONT of the retina!

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c) Can see clearly up close, but distant vision is blurry.

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30. Discuss the Hyperopic eye:

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a) FARSIGHTED!

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b) Light passes into the eye focused by the lens, but the focal point is BEHIND THE RETINA.

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c) What actually hits the retina is NOT IN FOCUS YET. BLURRY.

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d) Can see far of, but up close is blurry.

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31. What causes a person’s eye to be myopic or hyperopic?

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Myopic = Nearsighted

a)Eyeball is too long

b)A lens may be too strong

c)The cornea may be too curved.

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Hyperopic = Farsighted

a)Eye ball is too short

b)Lazy lens that won’t change shape

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32. What is Astigmatism?

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a) Unequal curvatures in different parts of the cornea or lens causes astigmatism.

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b) In this condition, blurry images occur because rays of light are focused not as points on the retina, but as lines.

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Special corrective lens are required specifically designed for the individual needing them.

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33. Explain how the myopic eye can be corrected?

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Concave lens are used to bend the light, so that it will focus on the retina after if passes through the lens

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34. Explain how vision in the Hyperopic eye can be corrected:

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A convex lens is used to bend the light so that the lens cn bring it to a focus on the retina.

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35. Explain how the images are received by the brain:

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a) The optic nerve in each eyeball receives the images from that eye’s field of view.

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b) At the optic chiasma, the neural tracts CROSS! The impulses from the right eye enters into the left cerebral hemisphere.

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The impulses from the left eye, enters into the right cerebral hemisphere.

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c) In the OCCIPITAL LOBE, these two views are merged, and …we see!

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What causes us to see

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a) Each eye has its own field of view.

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b) When we look at something, our right eye gives us one perspective, and the left eye gives us another perspective.

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c) When our mind puts these two perspectives together …3 – D !!!!

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Can we see in 3-D with just one eye?

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What if we lose one eye due to injury?

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You will only be able to see things flat, like looking at a picture in a book.

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37. Explain our eye reflexes:

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ConvergenceWhen we look at close objects, our lens muscles automatically adjust the shape of our lens by pushing it into a ball so we can see it.

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Add this Reflex term!

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DivergenceWhen we look at Far objects, our lens muscles automatically stretch the shape of our lens so we can see it.

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Photopupillary Reflex

The iris automatically closes when the light is too intense; and automatically opens when the light is less intense

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Accommodation papillary reflex

The pupils will constrict when we stare at close objects and open back up when we view distant things.

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38. What is eye strain, and how can we avoid it?

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Eye strain occurs when we read a lot, and the eye muscles stay busy tryng to keep the pupils constricted, and move the eye back and forth at the same time. They tire out.

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Avoid eye strain?

Simple, look UP and STARE at DISTANT objects for a few seconds. This will rest the eyes.