Visual Disorders
![]() Fred |
![]() Lilly |
„In my notebook, I've drawn a sketch of an eyeball which belongs to a person with a visual disorder. However, I haven't written down the headline.
Can you help me with that? Can you determine if the person is shortsighted or farsighted?“
a) The clear image happens to be in front of the retina. This means that the eyeball is too long and the visual disorder must be farsightedness.
b) The clear image happens to be in front of the retina. This means that the eyeball is too short and the visual disorder must be shortsightedness.
c) The eyeball is too long because the clear image happens to be in front of the retina. For this reason it must be shortsightedness.
d) Neither shortsightedness nor farsightedness is the case. The sketch depicts a normal eyeball.
b) The clear image happens to be in front of the retina. This means that the eyeball is too short and the visual disorder must be shortsightedness.
c) The eyeball is too long because the clear image happens to be in front of the retina. For this reason it must be shortsightedness.
d) Neither shortsightedness nor farsightedness is the case. The sketch depicts a normal eyeball.