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retinal

/ret-n-uhl/US // ˈrɛt n əl //

视网膜,视网膜的,网膜,视网膜上的

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of or relating to the retina of the eye.

Examples

  • They contained a diverse range of retinal cell types, which formed neuronal networks that actually responded to light and sent those signals into the brain.

  • Diagnosed with a retinal disease at the National Eye Institute at 15, he stopped driving his third year of law school at the University of Chicago.

  • These guys receive data from other retinal cells—such as those encoding color—and extend their long “arms” to form the main highway between the eyes and the visual cortex.

  • What’s more, a healthy retina reacts in real time to the amount and intensity of light striking it, becoming more reactive in low-light conditions and less reactive in bright light, to prevent damage to retinal cells.

  • In some practices, a technique called wide-field retinal imaging may be offered instead of dilating your eyes for an exam.

  • To complement brain wiring, everyone walks around with retinal cams.

  • He saw Andy as his comrade in anti-retinal and utterly abnormal art.

  • What could come closer to the anti-retinal position of Duchamp than paintings so dark they can barely impinge on our retinas?

  • In order then to avoid diplopia the macula lutea moves to where the retinal image is formed.

  • Single vision was also present when looking strongly to one side, and with differentiation of one retinal image by a red glass.

  • This is generally accounted for by fatigue of the retinal process.

  • The retinal image of the object is not only vague, but also distorted.

  • Retinal hmorrhages are frequent and usually small, but a considerable hmorrhage may take place into the vitreous.