perception: the way the brain makes sense of the
visual image detected by the eyes
retina: the light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye which
is made up of nerve cells called rods and cones
rods: light sensitive cells in the retina which respond
even in dim light
cones: light sensitive cells in the retina that detect colour
optic nerve: bundle of nerve cells that leads out from the
retina at the back of the eye that carries information from the
rods and cones to the brain
blind spot: the area of the retina where the optic nerve
leaves, it has no rods or gold so cannot detect light
optic chiasma: the cross-shape where some of the
information from the left and right eye crosses over to pass
into the opposite side of the brain
visual cortex: the area at the back of the brain that interprets visual
information
the visual cortex uses information from the eyes in perception
to understand shapes and distances, it also fills the gap left by
the blind spot in each eye