• citation needed] If the drug pilocarpine is administered, the pupils will constrict and accommodation is increased due to the parasympathetic action on the circular muscle fibers, conversely, atropine will cause paralysis of accommodation (cycloplegia) and dilation of the pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • Dilation of the pupil is mydriasis. (wikipedia.org)
  • The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Mydcombi (Eyenovia) for the dilation of pupils during diagnostic procedures. (medscape.com)
  • Cite this: Eyenovia's Mydcombi Gets FDA Nod for Pupil Dilation - Medscape - May 08, 2023. (medscape.com)
  • We report, for the first time, that acted laughs elicited higher pupil dilation than authentic ones and, reversely, authentic cries elicited higher pupil dilation than acted ones. (nature.com)
  • and that, reversely, authenticity in cries increases pupil dilation, through eliciting higher emotional arousal. (nature.com)
  • In other words, mydriasis is a temporary dilation of the pupils in response to light. (allaboutvision.com)
  • The dilator pupillae, innervated by sympathetic nerves from the superior cervical ganglion, cause the pupil to dilate when they contract. (wikipedia.org)
  • Furthermore, the pupil will dilate if a person sees an object of interest. (wikipedia.org)
  • For instance, when you enter a dark room, your pupils will naturally dilate (get larger) to adjust to a low-light environment. (allaboutvision.com)
  • Pupils get larger (dilate) in dim light and smaller (constrict) in bright light. (msdmanuals.com)
  • He was suspended in March 2021 for showing pupils a drawing taken from the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo during religious studies classes, provoking complaints from parents and protests outside the school's gates. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • After 25 years of age, the average pupil size decreases, though not at a steady rate. (wikipedia.org)
  • In England, the average pupil missed 8.4 of the 195 scheduled days in the 2018/19 academic year. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • We find that an increase in the private-school share by 10 percentage points increases average pupil achievement by almost 1 percentile rank point. (repec.org)
  • The most obvious symptom of blown pupils is having one or both pupils that appear abnormally dilated (large) and do not react to light. (allaboutvision.com)
  • Certain conditions and medications can alter the function of these muscles and lead to abnormally dilated or constricted pupils. (aao.org)
  • Primary/junior school pupils' sounds fine but somehow 'secondary school pupils' doesn't really gel, even for me. (usingenglish.com)
  • A partial return of all secondary school pupils to the classroom from Monday was "politically motivated", as the Scottish Government was seeking a "good news story", a senior teaching union official has claimed. (stv.tv)
  • The remaining primary pupils, P4-P7, all return on that date, with secondary school pupils making a partial return to the classroom through a blended learning model also involving home schooling. (stv.tv)
  • Data tables showing selected outputs on smoking prevalence and cigarette consumption from a survey of secondary school pupils in England in years 7 to 11 (mostly aged 11 to 15), which is currently run every other year. (who.int)
  • The image of the pupil as seen from outside the eye is the entrance pupil, which does not exactly correspond to the location and size of the physical pupil because it is magnified by the cornea. (wikipedia.org)
  • If the cornea, which is normally clear, becomes cloudy, it may look similar to a white pupil. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Although the causes of a cloudy or white cornea are different from those of a white pupil or white reflex, these problems also need medical attention right away. (medlineplus.gov)
  • A child that develops a white pupil or cloudy cornea needs immediate attention, preferably from an eye specialist. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Contact your provider if you notice any color changes in the pupil or cornea of the eye. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The per pupil expenditure report includes expenditure data from fiscal years 2018-2022 . (mass.edu)
  • the ridge of the entrance pupil of an optical system, indicating the place where the pupil of the eye should be placed to view the object. (dictionary.com)
  • Unilateral cases, where only one pupil is dilated and fixed, is known as anisocoria , meaning unequal pupil size. (allaboutvision.com)
  • You have pupils of unequal size (one pupil is larger/smaller than the other). (allaboutvision.com)
  • Unequal pupil size is called anisocoria. (msdmanuals.com)
  • If pupil sizes are very unequal, a person may notice the discrepancy. (msdmanuals.com)
  • More often, unequal pupils are noticed only during a doctor's examination. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Unequal pupils themselves usually cause no symptoms, but occasionally a person may have trouble focusing on near objects. (msdmanuals.com)
  • These more noticeable symptoms are often the reason people seek medical care rather than the unequal pupils. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Eye disorders that cause unequal pupils include birth defects and eye injury. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Inflammation of the iris (iritis) and certain types of glaucoma cause unequal pupils, but this finding is usually overshadowed by severe eye pain. (msdmanuals.com)
  • There are also tabs with the complete 5-year dataset, both expenditures and pupils, to support additional analysis. (mass.edu)
  • The pupil is a hole located in the center of the iris of the eye that allows light to strike the retina. (wikipedia.org)
  • citation needed] The size of the pupil is controlled by the iris, and varies depending on many factors, the most significant being the amount of light in the environment. (wikipedia.org)
  • In optical terms, the anatomical pupil is the eye's aperture and the iris is the aperture stop. (wikipedia.org)
  • The iris is a contractile structure, consisting mainly of smooth muscle, surrounding the pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • Light enters the eye through the pupil, and the iris regulates the amount of light by controlling the size of the pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • When the sphincter pupillae contract, the iris decreases or constricts the size of the pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • Abnormalities of the pupil and iris. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Such changes in pupil size have been difficult to characterize in the past in those with a dark iris, which is more common in people with darker skin tones, because it can be challenging to distinguish between the iris and the pupil. (medgadget.com)
  • This makes the iris appear lighter in the resulting images, and helps the technology to distinguish between iris and pupil, providing more robust diagnostics for those with dark eyes. (medgadget.com)
  • Changes in pupil size can offer information on a variety of neurological conditions, including traumatic brain injury and Alzheimer's disease, but our natural diversity in terms of skin tone and melanin content in the iris has meant that for those with dark eyes, it can be difficult to get an accurate measurement in pupil size changes. (medgadget.com)
  • The pupil size is closely regulated by muscles in the iris. (aao.org)
  • However, this masks wide variation in the number of days missed, with 10.9% of pupils absent for more than 10 days (DfE, 2020). (ucl.ac.uk)
  • some cats, reptiles, and foxes have vertical slit pupils, goats have horizontally oriented pupils, and some catfish have annular types. (wikipedia.org)
  • In contrast, horizontally elongated pupils are nearly always found in grazing animals, which have eyes on the sides of their head. (rawstory.com)
  • So, vertically elongated pupils help ambush predators capture their prey and horizontally elongated pupils help prey animals avoid their predators. (rawstory.com)
  • Is the pupil no longer horizontally aligned with the ground? (rawstory.com)
  • The key difference between blown pupils and mydriasis is pretty simple: One is a natural, normal response and the other is not. (allaboutvision.com)
  • But look at their eyes - where wolves have rounded pupils like humans, foxes instead have a thin vertical line. (rawstory.com)
  • Ibrahim Islam, pupil at Allerton Grange School, Leeds. (warwick.ac.uk)
  • Lily Baxter, pupil at Allerton Grange School, Leeds. (warwick.ac.uk)
  • Arghya Chakrabarty, pupil at Allerton Grange School, Leeds. (warwick.ac.uk)
  • On the face of it, and at its most simple, the RSA Pupil Design Awards is a secondary school competition about using design thinking to solve social challenges. (thersa.org)
  • Most answers indicated that the word pupil was archaic and that both in the UK and in the US the term student applied from primary school up to university. (usingenglish.com)
  • I see being a student as a choice, but you have to be a school pupil whether you like it or not. (usingenglish.com)
  • Also, and again in the U.S., the term 'student' is commonly used to refer to 'school children' as is 'pupil' depending on context. (usingenglish.com)
  • For the purposes of this Working Group the term "pupil support staff" is generally applied to all staff in school settings who provide support to the learning and teaching process and the wellbeing of children and young people. (gov.scot)
  • In what ways do pupils' usage of mobile devices (mobile phones and tablets) support their schoolwork within the school subject technology? (kth.se)
  • The objective of this project, is to make pupils' usage of mobile devices (mobile phones and tablets) visible with regard to the support of their schoolwork within the school subject of technology. (kth.se)
  • New arrival pupils may arrive at your school at any time of the year and you need to have a good induction procedure in place in order to support the pupil and family right from the start. (salford.gov.uk)
  • Many new arrival pupils need a lot of emotional and language support so that they can settle down in the new school environment and become effective learners in as short a time as possible. (salford.gov.uk)
  • A look at the empirical evidence on the strength of the relationship between school absence and pupil achievement. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • School absence occurs when a pupil does not attend school when it would usually be open. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • First, pupils can fail to turn up to school on a day that the school is open. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Achievement is most negatively affected if pupils are tested soon after their return to school. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • In many local school markets, this reform led to a significant increase in the quantity of such schools as well as in the share of pupils attending them. (repec.org)
  • The pupil welfare services include the services of a psychologist and school social worker as well as health care services. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • The personal services provided to pupils in pre-primary education include the health care services provided by child welfare clinics and psychologist and school social worker services. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • Up to one in five teachers are self-censoring their lessons for fear of offending Muslim pupils in the wake of the Batley Grammar School controversy , a study has found. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Nicola Sturgeon announced on March 2 that all pupils would have some time in school from March 15. (stv.tv)
  • Scottish Conservative education spokesman Jamie Greene said: "It is startling to hear a senior teaching union official effectively accuse Nicola Sturgeon of using Scotland's school pupils for political distraction. (stv.tv)
  • Swinney told the same programme: "We were concerned about wellbeing of S1 to S3 pupils, who might feel excluded from the return to school if we didn't give them some opportunity for face-to-face learning before the Easter holidays. (stv.tv)
  • Over the course of the project, the team is investigating whether ethnic disproportionality in the teaching workforce makes a difference to pupils' attainment and other school outcomes. (dur.ac.uk)
  • The school reported an improvement in concentration levels and socialisation between pupils following this move, which it said contributed to improved exam results. (yahoo.com)
  • Title : Nutritional Status Of Primary School Pupils In Baltimore Personal Author(s) : Saratsiotis, J. B.;Gordon, J. (cdc.gov)
  • Andersson, C 2017, ' The front and backstage: pupils' information activities in secondary school ', Information Research , vol. 22, nr. 1. (lu.se)
  • Why are my pupils so naturally large? (aao.org)
  • However, significant differences were found in the prevalence and magnitude of several pupil variables in the two patient groups. (nih.gov)
  • Goats, sheep, horses, domestic cats, and numerous other animals have pupils which vary from fully circular in faint light to narrow slits or rectangles in bright light. (rawstory.com)
  • We found that eyes of goats, deer, horses, and sheep rotate as they bend their head down to eat, keeping the pupil aligned with the ground. (rawstory.com)
  • Already our schools have noticed an improvement in grammar, communication and the confidence of the pupils involved…it is thrilling to see pupils engage with Classics - history, literature and language - and see it as meaningful, relevant, exciting and a real opportunity to take! (warwick.ac.uk)
  • On the inner edge lies a prominent structure, the collarette, marking the junction of the embryonic pupillary membrane covering the embryonic pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, in any human age group there is considerable variation in maximal pupil size. (wikipedia.org)
  • We estimate the impact of this increase in private enrolment on the average achievement of all pupils using within-municipality variation over time, and controlling for differential pre-reform municipality trends. (repec.org)
  • There are now a total of 100 ELSAs, who work in schools across the Island to support the emotional wellbeing of pupils in both primary and secondary schools. (www.gov.je)
  • To establish a coherent system to ensure pupil support staff in Scotland have access to role specific professional learning to assist them to reflect on practice, gain confidence from achievements and identify areas for development. (gov.scot)
  • Pre-primary education pupil welfare is provided through multidisciplinary cooperation with the Education Services and Social and Health Services in such a way that it ensures a functional and coherent approach. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • Thus, people with nervous system disorders that affect the pupil often also have a drooping eyelid, double vision, and/or visibly misaligned eyes. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The objective of the study was to evaluate the levels of communication of an adolescent pupil with deafblindness to program, fortify and implant communication forms. (bvsalud.org)
  • There is also some evidence of sorting of pupils along socioeconomic and ethnic lines. (repec.org)
  • Our researchers found that ethnic minority pupils in the North East of England may never be taught by someone of the same heritage. (dur.ac.uk)
  • This is due to the capital's exceptionally high ethnic minority pupil numbers. (dur.ac.uk)
  • In 2019, the country was number 95 among other countries in Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Primary Education with 16.72 Ratios. (nationmaster.com)
  • The largely dilated pupil may affect one eye (unilateral) or both eyes (bilateral). (allaboutvision.com)
  • Bilateral tonic pupils: Holmes Adie syndrome or generalised neuropathy? (nih.gov)
  • To compare the pupil signs in patients with bilateral pupillotonia caused by Holmes-Adie syndrome or generalised peripheral neuropathy. (nih.gov)
  • In any case, the magnitude of this effect will likely depend on what kind of educational activities pupils engage in during the closure. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Each day of individual pupil absence results in around 0.3-0.4% of a standard deviation reduction in achievement. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Equivalently, eight days of absence (the average in England) would move a pupil one place down a ranking of 100 pupils (e.g. from 50th to 51st). (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Pupils from low-income households see a larger negative effect from each day of absence. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • So we rechecked the data on animals with frontal eyes and vertical pupils and found that 82% are what is considered "short" (which we defined as having a shoulder height of less than 42cm) compared with only 17% of animals with circular pupils. (rawstory.com)
  • Teachers taking part last year told us the Pupil Design Awards gave students the chance to work in a way that provided them with knowledge of the processes expected of them in this part of the qualification. (thersa.org)
  • This statistic shows the ratio of pupils to teachers in Spain from 2003 to 2012. (statista.com)
  • A spokesman for South Lanarkshire Council said: "Head teachers of all three secondary schools in the area continue to work well together to ensure good communication between pupils and staff, and all schools will continue to work in partnership with the local police. (dailyrecord.co.uk)
  • With the project, we want to add to the knowledge about how teachers should strategize in order to make pupils' mobile device usage more supportive. (kth.se)
  • Mr Zahawi said: "Our teachers - and their pupils - deserve better than this. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • He added: "I've listened to young people directly myself who are concerned about the effects on their own wellbeing of the loss of social interaction with their peers and with their teachers, so that's why all secondary pupils are returning for some elements of education and face-to-face learning in the forthcoming few weeks. (stv.tv)
  • When this muscle contracts, it reduces the size of the pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • The reverse is true, so control of pupil size is controlled by differences in contraction intensity of each muscle. (wikipedia.org)
  • In this work, we asked participants to rate the authenticity of authentic and acted laughs and cries, while simultaneously recording their pupil size, taken as proxy of cognitive effort and arousal. (nature.com)
  • People who notice a sudden, unexplained change in pupil size should see an eye care provider, especially if only one pupil is affected. (allaboutvision.com)
  • You notice a sudden, unexplained change in pupil size. (allaboutvision.com)
  • A research team at the University of California San Diego have developed a smartphone attachment that can provide information on changes in pupil size, which can be used to assess neurological phenomena, such as traumatic brain injury and Alzheimer's disease. (medgadget.com)
  • Engineers within ophthalmology have known that conventional cameras are not suitable for pupil size measurements in those with dark eyes for some time. (medgadget.com)
  • Usually both pupils are about the same size and respond to light equally. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Scottish pupils have set a new record pass rate for Higher examinations. (bbc.com)
  • Since 2014, Turkey Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Primary Education fell by 2.9% year on year. (nationmaster.com)
  • How does Turkey rank in Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Primary Education? (nationmaster.com)
  • Pre-primary education pupils have the right to pupil welfare, i.e. the care of the child's overall well-being as an individual and as part of a group. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • Pupil welfare means promoting and maintaining the child's good learning, balanced mental and physical health and social well-being as well as their prerequisites in the pre-primary education community. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • As a rule, pupil welfare is carried out as preventive measures that support the entire pre-primary education community. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • In pre-primary education, pupil welfare is the responsibility of the pre-primary education community personnel and the employees in charge of the pupil welfare services. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • Individual pupil welfare work is always started in cooperation with the pre-primary education personnel and the guardian. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • A pupil in pre-primary education is entitled to pupil welfare, i.e. care for the child's holistic wellbeing both as an individual and as part of a group. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • Pupil welfare services in pre-primary education are implemented by wellbeing services county authorities in collaboration with the child's parents or guardians and the child. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • In addition, children are entitled to individual pupil welfare. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • Pupil welfare is carried out in cooperation with the child and guardians, taking into account the age and prerequisites of the child. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • The involvement of children and guardians is essential in community-based pupil welfare and it promotes well-being. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • The aim of pupil welfare is to create a healthy and safe learning and growth environment for children, support their learning, alleviate and prevent learning obstacles and difficulties, protect mental health, and prevent exclusion. (lappeenranta.fi)
  • In Tiina's dissertation work, she looks for ways in which to design pedagogical strategies with the objective to make pupils' mobile device usage supportive. (kth.se)
  • Students are said to be supportive of the new policy, with one pupil stating they were 'apprehensive' at the thought of being without a phone at first but are now happy to follow the rules. (yahoo.com)
  • Coordinated absences lasting for several weeks can have small long-run negative effects on pupil achievement. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Reducing pupil absences will have a positive effect on achievement and is likely to reduce achievement gaps between high and low income pupils. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • These pathways carry nerve impulses to the pupil and to the muscles that control the eye and eyelid. (msdmanuals.com)
  • For instance, a domestic cat can change its pupil area by a factor of 135 from fully dilated to fully constricted, whereas humans, with a round pupil, can only change area by a factor of 15. (rawstory.com)
  • As schools open their doors and welcome students into the new academic year, the RSA Pupil Design Awards team is preparing to run the competition with a greater number of schools and a fantastic new programme partner. (thersa.org)
  • As children across the country shuffled back into classrooms on Tuesday, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was busy touring a number of schools, beginning in Modi'in and ending in the north of the country, where he welcomed pupils back after the summer break and encouraged them to strengthen their connection to the Land of Israel. (jpost.com)
  • Glasses in Classes, which was developed in Bradford schools through a partnership including Leeds academics, has received government funding to reach a further 9,000 pupils in at least 225 schools. (leeds.ac.uk)
  • Pupils are already invited to attend vision screenings in reception classes but schools are not usually given the results. (leeds.ac.uk)
  • However, schools participating in the project can see the results of the tests, enabling them to identify which pupils and families to support. (leeds.ac.uk)
  • They also include payments for local resident pupils who are being educated in schools outside the district. (mass.edu)
  • In addition to showing the overall cost per pupil, they provide detail about how much schools spend in specific functional areas such as administration, teaching, and maintenance. (mass.edu)
  • Pupils from Stonelaw, Cathkin and Trinity schools are squaring up to each other during lunch hours. (dailyrecord.co.uk)
  • Recognizing the challenges and the resources needed to continue to provide safe and effective pupil transportation, the Ohio Department of Education (ODE) provides fiscal and technical support to Ohio schools. (ohio.gov)
  • This working group has been established to consider how best we can empower and support pupil support staff, including taking forward action in response to the recommendations of the additional support for learning review. (gov.scot)
  • To maintain and improve the quality of pupil support in Scotland to enhance the impact it has on pupils' learning and wellbeing and on reducing teacher workload. (gov.scot)
  • Regardless of aetiology, the patients generally had pupil signs typical of pupillotonia (small dark diameters, large light diameters, tonic near responses, attenuated light responses with light-near dissociation, and sector palsy). (nih.gov)
  • Horner Syndrome Horner syndrome affects one side of the face, causing the eyelid to droop, the pupil to become small (constricted), and sweating to decrease. (msdmanuals.com)
  • If it's determined that the blown pupil(s) are a side effect of medication or chemical exposure, your eye care provider will likely want to monitor your condition for a day or two to make sure no other symptoms, such as ptosis , appear. (allaboutvision.com)
  • It appears black because light rays entering the pupil are either absorbed by the tissues inside the eye directly, or absorbed after diffuse reflections within the eye that mostly miss exiting the narrow pupil. (wikipedia.org)
  • The pupil gets wider in the dark and narrower in light. (wikipedia.org)
  • This condition is typified by chronically widened pupils due to the decreased ability of the optic nerves to respond to light. (wikipedia.org)
  • A blown, or blown out, pupil is characterized by a pupil that is largely dilated and unresponsive to light. (allaboutvision.com)
  • Blown pupils are dilated very widely and fixed, meaning they do not respond to an outside stimulus, such as light. (allaboutvision.com)
  • The attachment is placed over the camera and then placed over the eye, where the camera flashes the eye with bright light and records video of the pupil movement. (medgadget.com)
  • The established theory for this is that elongated pupils allow greater control of the amount of light entering the eye. (rawstory.com)
  • However, if the only reason for elongated pupils was to control the amount of light entering the eye, the orientation would not be important: horizontal, vertical, or diagonal would all offer the same advantages. (rawstory.com)
  • Having a horizontal pupil enhances the amount of light they can receive in front of and behind them while reducing the amount of light from above and below. (rawstory.com)
  • If the larger pupil is abnormal, the difference between pupil sizes is greater in bright light. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The mission of the Ohio Department of Education's Pupil Transportation Office is to provide guidance, assistance and training to all pupil transportation personnel and to provide programs directed toward achieving the highest level of safety, efficiency and compliance. (ohio.gov)
  • The scheme has received Opportunity Area funding, meaning pupils in disadvantaged areas in Doncaster, Derby, Durham, Norwich and Breckland, and the North Yorkshire Coast, will benefit from being involved in the project. (leeds.ac.uk)
  • In a new study published in the journal Science Advances , colleagues from Durham, Berkeley and I explain why these pupil shapes have developed. (rawstory.com)
  • The Pupil Design Awards give students a leading role at various stages of the design process so that as well as gaining knowledge about design thinking as an approach to problem-solving, they also have the chance to build collaboration, leadership and communication skills. (thersa.org)
  • About 35,000 students opted to find out their results by text and e-mail a day early on Wednesday, but all pupils will receive their certificates through the letterbox in the traditional manner on Thursday. (bbc.com)
  • Well-child exams routinely screen for a white pupil in children. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Speaking to pupils earlier in the day in Modi'in, Netanyahu was asked by one of the children if he had been excited about being elected prime minister. (jpost.com)
  • However, studies have shown that 30% of pupils who need glasses have not been to an optician, while disadvantaged children are less likely to get, or wear, the glasses they need. (leeds.ac.uk)
  • By clicking on the tabs at the bottom of the workbook, there are additional reports showing a 3-year trend by major functional areas, and a summary showing per pupil expenditures for all districts. (mass.edu)
  • I've always had larger pupils. (aao.org)
  • Either the larger or the smaller pupil may be the abnormal one depending on the cause. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Some time ago a poster asked whether the words student and pupil are synonymous. (usingenglish.com)
  • Singer, who built such an intricate puzzle in his first movie, The Usual Suspects , has almost too easy a time of it in Apt Pupil . (isthmus.com)
  • Examination may reveal that the blown pupils are caused by problems in the brain. (allaboutvision.com)
  • Per pupil expenditures are calculated from information provided on each district's End of Year Financial Report (EOYR). (mass.edu)
  • Grosvenor's UK property business has invested in Pupil, a spatial data company that has created an ecosystem to digitally map the built world. (grosvenor.com)
  • With a highly-regarded and scalable model Pupil is set to become the dominant spatial data company in the property industry. (grosvenor.com)
  • Pupil is a spatial data company that has created an ecosystem to digitally map the built world, taking physical offline buildings and digitising them. (grosvenor.com)
  • Putting data in a geographical context, they showed how the ethnicity of teaching staff matched up to pupils' ethnicity across England's regions and local authorities. (dur.ac.uk)
  • In the dark it will be the same at first, but will approach the maximum distance for a wide pupil 3 to 8 mm. (wikipedia.org)
  • For example, at the peak age of 15, the dark-adapted pupil can vary from 4 mm to 9 mm with different individuals. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, once you step out of the dark room, your pupils will return to normal or adjust to the new level of brightness. (allaboutvision.com)
  • If the smaller pupil is abnormal, the difference is greater in the dark. (msdmanuals.com)