Change set

Pick exam & year, then Go.

Question map
Not attempted Correct Incorrect Bookmarked
Loading…
Q45 (NDA-I/2017) Science & Technology › Basic Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) › Human anatomy physiology Answer Verified

Colour vision in human eyes is the function of photoreceptor cells named

Result
Your answer:  ·  Correct: B
Explanation

Colour vision in the human eye is primarily the function of cone cells, which are specialized photoreceptor cells located in the retina [1]. Humans typically possess three types of cones—short-wavelength (S), middle-wavelength (M), and long-wavelength (L) sensitive—each containing specific photopigments (iodopsins) that respond to different wavelengths of light [4]. These cells are most active in well-lit environments (photopic vision) and are concentrated in the fovea centralis, providing high visual acuity and the ability to perceive the visible spectrum [3]. In contrast, rod cells are responsible for vision in dim light (scotopic vision) and do not mediate colour perception [1]. The blind spot is the region where the optic nerve exits the eye and lacks photoreceptors entirely, while the fovea is the anatomical location where cones are most densely packed [1].

Sources

  1. [1] Science , class X (NCERT 2025 ed.) > Chapter 10: The Human Eye and the Colourful World > 10.1 THE HUMAN EYE > p. 162
  2. [4] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4651776/
  3. [3] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK542332/
How others answered
Each bar shows the % of students who chose that option. Green bar = correct answer, blue outline = your choice.
Community Performance
Out of everyone who attempted this question.
77%
got it right
✓ Thank you! We'll review this.

SIMILAR QUESTIONS

4 Cross-Linked PYQs

UPSC repeats concepts across years. Login to see how this question connects to 4 others.

Login with Google