sjóntauginna
Sjóntauginna, known scientifically as the optic nerve, is a crucial part of the visual system in humans and many other animals. It is a bundle of nerve fibers that transmits visual information from the retina of the eye to the brain. Specifically, it carries signals from the photoreceptor cells (rods and cones) in the retina, which detect light and color, to the visual cortex in the brain where these signals are interpreted as images.
Each optic nerve is composed of roughly one million nerve fibers. These fibers originate from the ganglion
The optic nerves from both eyes partially cross over at a structure called the optic chiasm, located