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7.6: Two Eyes

  • Page ID
    84029

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    Though each eye can perform all the functions carried out by the other, there are two advantages to having two eyes. The first is that a person's field of view is wider when viewing with both eyes at the same time. This feature provides more information about the environment and improves a person's ability to respond to the surrounding conditions.

    Depth Perception (Binocular Vision)

    The second advantage of viewing with two eyes is that a person can perceive the distance between himself or herself and the objects being viewed. This is known as depth perception or binocular vision. It is very important in activities where a person needs to make contact or avoid making contact with objects in the environment, as occurs when people reach out to grasp something or drive a vehicle.

    Depth perception is possible because the eyes are a few inches apart. Because of this separation, the images of objects at different distances from the eyes are seen in slightly different positions relative to each other. This difference can be demonstrated by holding one hand out at arm's length and looking at a distant scene first with one eye and then with the other. It will be noted that the hand blocks out different parts of the scene when the scene is viewed with each eye. During impulse processing, when viewing occurs with both eyes open, the brain interprets the differences in the impulses from the eyes as depth or distance.

    Age Changes

    Aging causes a decrease in depth perception. Some of this decline occurs because aging does not affect both eyes equally. As the quality of images formed in one eye becomes substantially different from the quality of those formed in the other, the brain has increasing difficulty comparing the impulses from the two sets of images. Any alteration in the ability to aim both eyes at the same object has the same effect. The brain may even completely block its interpretation of impulses from one eye and provide vision that is equivalent to seeing with only the other eye. Another reason for decreased depth perception is aging of the retinal and brain neurons that process the impulses originating in the cones and rods.


    This page titled 7.6: Two Eyes is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Augustine G. DiGiovanna via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.