This part of the eye acts like the film of a camera.
What is the retina?
Physical part of the ear we can see.
These control the amount of light our eyes receive.
What are pupils?
Determines the loudness of sound.
What is amplitude?
Part of the brain that deals with vision.
What is occipital lobe?
Black circle in the middle of the eye.
What is pupil?
Looks like a snail, located in the inner ear.
What is cochlea?
This nerve transmits visual information from the eye to the brain.
What is the optic nerve?
Type of deafness that is more likely to use a hearing aid.
What is conductive deafness?
Part of the brain that deals with hearing.
What is temporal lobe?
These are called photoreceptors.
What are rods and cones?
Connects our ear to our brain.
What is the auditory nerve?
These play a role in enabling us to perceive colors.
What are cones?
Where the ossicles (3 bones) are located.
What is the middle ear?
Two characteristics of sound.
What is pitch and loudness?
Area of the eye where nothing is registered.
What is blind spot?
Thin membrane that vibrates when sound waves strike it.
What is eardrum?
Photoreceptor that is in charge of night vision and peripheral vision.
What are rods?
Damage to the inner ear could lead to this.
What is sensorineural deafness?
Visual impression that remains in our eyes.
What is afterimage?
Absence of cones in the eye can cause this.
What is color blindness?
Three ossicles in our middle ear.
What is hammer, anvil, and stirrup?
This is what an eye doctor (Optometrist or Ophthalmologist) tests for.
What is visual acuity?
Damage to the middle ear could lead to this.
What is conductive deafness?
Device to help people with sensorineural deafness.
What is cochlear implant?