The evolution of the human eye - Joshua Harvey

1,446,940 views ・ 2015-01-08

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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The human eye is an amazing mechanism,
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able to detect anywhere from a few photons to direct sunlight,
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or switch focus from the screen in front of you
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to the distant horizon in a third of a second.
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In fact, the structures required for such incredible flexibility
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were once considered so complex
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that Charles Darwin himself acknowledged that the idea of there having evolved
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seemed absurd in the highest possible degree.
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And yet, that is exactly what happened, starting more than 500 million years ago.
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The story of the human eye begins with a simple light spot,
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such as the one found in single-celled organisms,
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like euglena.
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This is a cluster of light-sensitive proteins
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linked to the organism's flagellum,
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activating when it finds light and, therefore, food.
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A more complex version of this light spot can be found in the flat worm, planaria.
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Being cupped, rather than flat,
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enables it to better sense the direction of the incoming light.
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Among its other uses,
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this ability allows an organism to seek out shade and hide from predators.
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Over the millenia,
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as such light cups grew deeper in some organisms,
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the opening at the front grew smaller.
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The result was a pinhole effect, which increased resolution dramatically,
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reducing distortion by only allowing a thin beam of light into the eye.
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The nautilus, an ancestor of the octopus,
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uses this pinhole eye for improved resolution and directional sensing.
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Although the pinhole eye allows for simple images,
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the key step towards the eye as we know it is a lens.
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This is thought to have evolved
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through transparent cells covering the opening to prevent infection,
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allowing the inside of the eye to fill with fluid
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that optimizes light sensitivity and processing.
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Crystalline proteins forming at the surface
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created a structure that proved useful
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in focusing light at a single point on the retina.
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It is this lens that is the key to the eye's adaptability,
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changing its curvature to adapt to near and far vision.
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This structure of the pinhole camera with a lens
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served as the basis for what would eventually evolve into the human eye.
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Further refinements would include a colored ring, called the iris,
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that controls the amount of light entering the eye,
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a tough white outer layer, known as the sclera,
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to maintain its structure,
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and tear glands that secrete a protective film.
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But equally important
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was the accompanying evolution of the brain,
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with its expansion of the visual cortex
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to process the sharper and more colorful images it was receiving.
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We now know that far from being an ideal masterpiece of design,
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our eye bares traces of its step by step evolution.
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For example, the human retina is inverted,
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with light-detecting cells facing away from the eye opening.
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This results in a blind spot,
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where the optic nerve must pierce the retina
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to reach the photosensitive layer in the back.
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The similar looking eyes of cephalopods,
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which evolved independently,
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have a front-facing retina, allowing them to see without a blind spot.
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Other creatures' eyes display different adaptations.
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Anableps, the so called four-eyed fish,
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have eyes divided in two sections for looking above and under water,
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perfect for spotting both predators and prey.
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Cats, classically nighttime hunters, have evolved with a reflective layer
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maximizing the amount of light the eye can detect,
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granting them excellent night vision, as well as their signature glow.
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These are just a few examples of the huge diversity of eyes in the animal kingdom.
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So if you could design an eye, would you do it any differently?
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This question isn't as strange as it might sound.
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Today, doctors and scientists are looking at different eye structures
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to help design biomechanical implants for the vision impaired.
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And in the not so distant future,
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the machines built with the precision and flexibilty of the human eye
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may even enable it to surpass its own evolution.
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