Matthew Piette

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Without tapeta lucida, in humans, bright light reflects off the many blood vessels at the backs of the eyes, leading to the red-eye effect commonly seen in flash photography. Cameras with anti-red features use short flashes of light, before the real flash, to get the irises to constrict and make the pupils small, limiting the amount of light from the real flash that gets to the backs of the eyes.
Evolution Gone Wrong: The Curious Reasons Why Our Bodies Work (Or Don't)
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