<P> The accommodation reflex (or accommodation - convergence reflex) is a reflex action of the eye, in response to focusing on a near object, then looking at a distant object (and vice versa), comprising coordinated changes in vergence, lens shape and pupil size (accommodation). It is dependent on cranial nerve II (afferent limb of reflex), superior centers (interneuron) and cranial nerve III (efferent limb of reflex). The change in the shape of the lens is controlled by the ciliary muscles inside the eye . Changes in contraction of the ciliary muscles alter the focal distance of the eye, causing nearer or farther images to come into focus on the retina; this process is known as accommodation . The reflex, controlled by the parasympathetic nervous system, involves three responses; pupil accommodation, lens accommodation, and convergence . </P> <P> A near object (for example, a computer screen) appears large in the field of vision, and the eye receives light from wide angles . When moving focus from a distant to a near object, the eyes converge . The ciliary muscle constricts making the lens thicker, shortening its focal length . The pupil constricts in order to prevent strongly diverging light rays hitting the periphery of the cornea and the lens from entering the eye and creating a blurred image . </P>

What is the action of the lens and suspensory ligaments during near and far vision