19/09/2025
📸👁 The Eye & The Camera – Where Medicine Meets Photography 👁📸
As a doctor and a photographer, I’m always fascinated by how the human body mirrors technology. The eye and the camera lens are perfect examples of biology inspiring design:
Pupil ↔ Aperture: Both control how much light enters. A dilated pupil or a wide aperture (f/1.8) allows more light in for darker settings. A constricted pupil or a small aperture (f/16) reduces light, giving sharper depth.
Retina ↔ Sensor: The retina captures light and sends signals to the brain, just as a digital sensor records light and transforms it into an image.
Eyelid ↔ Shutter: Just like the camera shutter opens and closes to expose the sensor, the eyelids regulate exposure and protect the eye.
Photoreceptor sensitivity ↔ ISO: Rods and cones adjust sensitivity depending on light levels, much like changing ISO in a camera. Higher ISO helps in low light but comes with “noise” — in the eye, that’s the graininess of vision in dim settings.
Focus mechanism: The eye’s lens changes shape (accommodation), while a camera lens shifts glass elements. Both work tirelessly to give us clarity.
Medicine and photography share the same principle: precision in capturing reality. In medicine, we strive to see clearly — whether through imaging, labs, or clinical judgement. In photography, clarity transforms a fleeting moment into memory.
In both fields, the lens through which we see the world matters.