Not exact matches
The number of individuals with nonfunctional
rods and cones that still have the ability to
sense light is likely «vanishingly small,» he says.
That's where — according to new research — a waste product of the retina fuels part of the eye that powers the
rods and cones that help us
sense light.
The way the eye works is that light must pass through the RGCs to reach the photoreceptors, ie, the
rod and cone cells that
sense light.