Eye Structure
Vision Impairment
Hallucinations
Optical illusions
100

How many coats does the eye have?

3

100
Name 1 of the eye conditions listed in the slides

 cataracts, refractive error, age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, and diabetic retinopathy.

100

What in the brain causes hallucinations?

chemical reactions

100

when the brain interprets a two-dimensional image as three-dimensional what can happen?

An optical illusion

200

What part of the eye does light hit to allow us to see?

The retina

200

What is the most common eye condition?(bonus 100 if you can state the statistic from the slide)

Cataracts (90% of Americans over 60)

200

What senses do hallucinations effect?

All of them

200

(true or false) Even once the brain understands an illusion it can still be deceived by it. 

False 

300

What parts of the eye are in the outer coat?

cornea and the sclera

300

What do most of these eye conditions commonly cause?

Vision Blurriness

300

What can hallucinations cause?

Schizophrenia or bipolar, drugs, side effects from meds,falling asleep, being drunk, being ill, lack of sleep etc. 


300

What is visualization? 

Your brain uses signals from the retina to make conclusions about what you are looking at and form a mental image

400

How many parts is the eye made of according to the image shown in the slides?

9

400

What part of the eye does cataracts effect?

Eye lens

400

What types of hallucinations affect sleep?

hypnopompic and hypnagogic hallucinations

400

What part of the brain processes images?

The visual cortex

500

What cell in the retina turns light into electrical signals?

photoreceptors

500

What is glaucoma? 

damaging of the optic nerve that causes vision loss and/or blindness.

500

What are Proprioceptive Hallucinations?

they make you feel as if your body is moving or falling

500

What builds your perception of your surroundings?

Neurons