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Neural accommodation or neuronal accommodation occurs when a neuron or muscle cell is depolarised by slowly rising current (ramp depolarisation) in vitro. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The Hodgkin–Huxley model also shows accommodation. [ 3 ]
Accommodation is the process by which the vertebrate eye ... Duane's classical curves showing the amplitude or width of accommodation as changing with age. Mean (B ...
Light from a single point of a distant object and light from a single point of a near object being brought to a focus. The accommodation reflex (or accommodation-convergence reflex) is a reflex action of the eye, in response to focusing on a near object, then looking at a distant object (and vice versa), comprising coordinated changes in vergence, lens shape (accommodation) and pupil size.
In visual perception, the near point is the closest point at which an object can be placed and still form a focused image on the retina, within the eye's accommodation range. The other limit to the eye's accommodation range is the far point. A normal eye is considered to have a near point at about 11 cm (4.3 in) for a thirty year old. [1]
Once an individual enters a dark setting most of their rod cells will already be accommodated to the dark and be able to transmit visual signals to the brain without an accommodation period. [ 30 ] The concept of red lenses for dark adaptation is based upon experimentation by Antoine Béclère and his early work with radiology.
The internal environment (or milieu intérieur in French; French pronunciation: [mi.ljø ɛ̃.te.ʁjœʁ]) was a concept developed by Claude Bernard, [1] [2] a French physiologist in the 19th century, to describe the interstitial fluid and its physiological capacity to ensure protective stability for the tissues and organs of multicellular organisms.
Cognitive biology is an emerging science that regards natural cognition as a biological function. [1] It is based on the theoretical assumption that every organism—whether a single cell or multicellular—is continually engaged in systematic acts of cognition coupled with intentional behaviors, i.e., a sensory-motor coupling. [2]
In medicine and anatomy, the special senses are the senses that have specialized organs devoted to them: . vision (the eye); hearing and balance (the ear, which includes the auditory system and vestibular system)