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Interesting Facts about Human Eyes

 
Interesting Facts about Human Eyes 1) Eyes are composed of more than 2 million workin  read full article 
   
 

Pet Vision

 
Pet Vision Do you ever wonder if your pet sees the same things with the same detail th  read full article 
   
 

February is Age Related Macular Degeneration Awareness Month

 
February is Age Related Macular Degeneration Awareness Month Doylestown, PA - February   read full article 
   
 

Local Artist Program, Featuring Shirley Broad

 
Local Artist Program, Featuring Shirley Broad Matossian Eye Associates launched its Local   read full article 
   
 
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
 
06:30 PM To 08:00 PM
 
Cynthia Matossian, MD is presenting a free community presentation at the V.I.A. Auditorium in the He
view event
   

Interesting Facts about Human Eyes

Posted on: Thursday, May 23, 2013
Author: Matossian Eye Associates

Tags: eyes, facts, anatomy

Interesting Facts about Human Eyes

1) Eyes are composed of more than 2 million working parts

2) The average person blinks 12 times per minute - about 10,000 blinks in an average day

3) Eyes can process 36,000 bits of information every hour.

4) Only 1/6th of the eyeball is exposed to the outside world

5) Eyelashes have an average life span of 5 months.

6) The eyeball of a human weighs approximately 28 grams.

7) Your eye will focus on about 50 things per second.

8) About half of our brain is involved in the seeing process. Humans are very much visual animals.

9) Under the right conditions, the human eye can see the light of a candle at a distance of 14 miles.

10) The external muscles that move the eyes are the strongest muscles in the human body for the job that they have to do. They are 100 times more powerful than they need to be.

Clayton Grinage

 

Pet Vision

Posted on: Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Author: Matossian Eye Associates

Tags: dogs, cats, animals, pets, vision, tapetum lucidum

Pet Vision

Do you ever wonder if your pet sees the same things with the same detail that you do? The answer is quite complex.  One of my dogs recently had cataract surgery.  So I’ve been reading about pet vision – and this is what I’ve learned so far.While in some ways pet vision is not as good as ours, it is however finely tuned to give them specific advantages in certain environments.

In general, dogs and cats are much more sensitive to light and motion than people are, but they cannot see as accurately or in the same immense color spectrum that we can.

When it comes to detecting motion, both people and pets are better at seeing moving objects than stationary ones. People are 10 to 12 times better at detecting moving objects in bright light when compared to pets. However, pets outperform us in this category in dim light. . 

Dogs and cats eyes have amazing adaptations for nocturnal vision.

Pets owe these abilities to their amazing light sensitivity. Both dogs and cats can detect very low levels of light and are far superior in this capability when compared to humans. Cats need seven times less light than people do to make their way around in the dark. Their incredible nocturnal vision first comes from the vertical shape of their pupil and their very large eyes, which allow them to take in a maximum amount of light. Next, the shiny surface at the back of their eye - called the tapetum lucidum - reflects 130 times more light than a mere human eye, which allows them to function confidently in near-black conditions! Humans don't have a tapetum at all, but both dogs and cats do. This structure in certain animal's eyes is what causes them to reflect and appear green or yellow when caught in a beam of light at night. 

Dog and cat eyes have far fewer color-sensitive cone receptors, so they do not see with the same spectrum that people do. Dog color vision appears to be the most similar to people who are red-green color blind. Dogs generally see in two hues - blue and yellow. Cats have color vision also, but to a lesser extent than dogs. While it seems to be difficult for pets to differentiate between red, orange, yellow and green, they interestingly outperform people on distinguishing multiple shades of grey. This ability is far more important for vision in dim light situations

People are capable of seeing 180 degrees around themselves without moving their head, and cats are similar with an estimated range of 200 degrees. The average dog can see an incredible 240 degrees around himself.  Dog breeds like the pug- which have short noses and widely spaced eyes - can see an even wider range when compared to dogs with a longer nose and more forward-facing eyes, like a Greyhound. Regardless of the breed, a dog's ability to see the world around himself is far greater than a person's.

20/20 vision indicates the ability of a test subject to decipher the details of an object 20 feet away that a normal person could see from that distance. Using this scale, dogs come in at 20/75, and cats even further behind at 20/100 to 20/200. This means that from 20 feet away, normal dogs can detect what a person with normal vision could detect at 75 feet away.

When compared to human vision, dogs and cats see both better and worse… just a little differently than we do.

Clayton Grinage

 

Louis Bosa - Waiting

Posted on: Friday, May 17, 2013
Author: Matossian Eye Associates

Tags: local artist program, local artist, peoples choice award

Louis Bosa – “Waiting”

 

Louis Bosa born in 1905, in Codroipo, Italy immigrated to the U.S. at age 18 after studies at the Accademia della Belle Arti in Venice and became an American citizen. He then studied under John Sloan of the Ashcan School at the Art Students League in New York. A distinguished painter, Louis Bosa's work has been likened to that of artists ranging from Pieter Breughel the Elder to John Sloan.  Bosa painted for the Works Progress Administration and the Whitney Museum. He taught at the Cleveland Institute of Art, the New York Art Students League, the Parsons School of Design, Syracuse University, and the University of Notre Dame at South Bend, Indiana.  His work was recently exhibited in the reception area of Matossian Eye Associates Doylestown, PA office to be enjoyed by patients and visitors.   “Waiting” won the People’s Choice Award from Matossian Eye Associates in the interactive portion of this exhibit as the favorite painting of the patients who voted.


 

Why Did Pirates Wear Patches?

Posted on: Thursday, May 16, 2013
Author: Matossian Eye Associates

Tags: pirates, patches, light adaptation

Why Did Pirates Wear Patches?

"Ever wonder why a pirate wears patches? It's not because he was wounded in a sword fight," says Dr. Jim Sheedy, a doctor of vision science and director of the Vision Performance Institute at Oregon's Pacific University. Seamen must constantly move between the pitch black of below decks and the bright sunshine above.

When you move from dark into light the eyes adapt quickly, but going from light to the dark "requires the regeneration of photo pigments, and that takes some time to reach full dark-adaptation," says Dr. Sheedy. "When going from bright light to maximum darkness, studies have shown, eye sensitivity continues to change for up to 25 minutes," he says.

"Smart pirates wore a patch over one eye to keep it dark-adapted outside. Should a battle break out and the pirate had to shimmy below, he would simply switch the patch to the outdoor eye and he could see in the dark right away—saving him 25 minutes of flailing his cutlass about in near blindness."

Taken from an article that appeared April 9, 2013, on page D4 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: BURNING QUESTION | Does reading in dim light hurt your eyes?.

 

Jennifer Viscusi, OD

 

Jan Lipes - "House On Pidcock Creek"

Posted on: Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Author: Matossian Eye Associates

Tags: local artist program, local artist, peoples choice award

Jan Lipes – House On Pidcock Creek

 

Jan Lipes of Solebury, PA has been painting in the New Hope-Lambertville area for the past twelve years. He has won numerous awards for his local landscapes, including the Phillips Mill Art Committee award at the Phillips' Mill 71st Annual Juried Fall Exhibition as well as the Sienkiewicz Award for Traditional Painting in the Style of the New Hope School at the Phillips' Mill 72nd Annual Juried Fall Exhibition. In 2002 he was a featured artist at the Gallery at Bristol-Myers-Squibb exhibition "Up the River Now".  His work was recently exhibited in the reception area of Matossian Eye Associates Hopewell, NJ office to be enjoyed by patients and visitors.   “House on Pidcock Creek” won the People’s Choice Award from Matossian Eye Associates in the interactive portion of this exhibit as the favorite painting of the patients who voted.

 

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