Coordination and control - The nervous system - OCR GatewayThe eye
The nervous system allows us to react to our surroundings very quickly and to coordinate our behavior. It comprises millions of neurones and electrical impulses pass along them very quickly.
The eye is a sense organ containing receptorsOrgans which recognise and respond to stimuli. sensitive to light intensity and colour.
Structure
Function
Cornea
Refracts light - bends it as it enters the eye
Iris
Controls how much light enters the pupil
Lens
Further refracts light to focus it onto the retina
Retina
Contains the light receptors
Optic nerve
Carries impulses between the eye and the brain
Ciliary muscle/body
Alters the shape of the lens so that the eye can focus
Suspensory ligament
Attaches the ciliary muscle to the lens
Structure
Cornea
Function
Refracts light - bends it as it enters the eye
Structure
Iris
Function
Controls how much light enters the pupil
Structure
Lens
Function
Further refracts light to focus it onto the retina
Structure
Retina
Function
Contains the light receptors
Structure
Optic nerve
Function
Carries impulses between the eye and the brain
Structure
Ciliary muscle/body
Function
Alters the shape of the lens so that the eye can focus
Structure
Suspensory ligament
Function
Attaches the ciliary muscle to the lens
The retina
Light passes through the eyeball to the retina. There are two main types of light receptors - rods and cones. Rods are more sensitive to light than cones so they are useful for seeing in dim light. There are three different types of cone cells which produce colour vision.
The pupil reflex
The amount of light entering the eye is controlled by a reflex actionAutomatic and rapid response to a stimulus. . The size of the pupil changes in response to bright or dim light. This is controlled by the muscles of the iris.