1. Your retinas actually perceive the outside world as upside-down – your brain flips the image for you.
If you want to see the world as your retinas do, try a pair of prism glasses. Just don’t, you know, walk near sheer drops or operate heavy machinery while wearing them.
2. In addition to being upside-down, images arrive at your retina split in half and distorted.
upload.wikimedia.org / wikicommons / Via quora.com
Each half of your brain receives one
half of the image, and then they scramble the images together to compose
the whole picture you’re used to seeing.
3. Your retinas cannot detect the colour red.
Although your retinas have red, green
and blue colour receptors, the “red” receptor only detects
yellow-green, and the “green” receptor detects blue-green. Your brain
combines these signals and turns them into red.
4. Your peripheral vision is very low-resolution and is almost in black-and-white.
Thinkstock / quora.com
You don’t realise it because your eyes move to “fill in” the peripheral detail before you notice the difference.
5. Got blue eyes? You share an ancestor with all other blue-eyed people across the world.
6. And if you have brown eyes, you’re old school.
All humans originally had brown eyes. Blue eyes appeared as a mutation about 6,000 years ago.
7. If you’re blind, but were born with sight, you probably still see images in your dreams.
FOX / thesimpsonsforever.tumblr.com / Via quora.com
8. On average, you blink 17 times a minute.
That’s 14,280 times in a 14-hour day, and 5.2 million times a year.
9. “20/20 vision” doesn’t equal perfect vision. It just means you can see 20 feet in front of you as well as the average person can.
10. If you’re shortsighted, your eyeball is longer than normal. If you’re farsighted, it’s shorter than average.
11. Your eyes are almost the same size as they were when you were born. And newborn babies can see clearly up to 15 inches away.
Which is, handily, generally where their mothers’ faces are when they’re breastfeeding.
12. Your tears have different compositions based on whether something’s irritating your eye, or you’re crying, or yawning.
Gaumont Buena Vista International / watermelanieseeding.tumblr.com / Via quora.com / eyecare2020.com
13. Your eye is constantly making tiny jerking movements called “microsaccades” to stop objects from fading from your vision.
A process called Troxler’s phenomenon
causes static objects in your gaze to disappear if you stare at them
for too long (see image below). Microsaccades stop this from happening.
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