“…In many insects, sensory input to the CX is largely visual, and response properties often have a clear navigational context. Strong responsiveness has been found to the angle of polarized light from dorsal directions in field crickets, desert locusts, monarch butterflies, dung beetles and sweet bees (Vitzthum et al, 2002;Sakura et al, 2008;Heinze and Reppert, 2011;el Jundi et al, 2015;Stone et al, 2017), approaching dark objects and small moving targets in locusts (Rosner and Homberg, 2013;Homberg, 2015b, 2017), wide-field motion in cockroaches, flies and bees (Kathman et al, 2014;Weir et al, 2014;Weir and Dickinson, 2015;Stone et al, 2017), and azimuth-dependent presentation of light spots or vertical bars in flies, beetles, cockroaches, monarch butterflies and desert locusts (Heinze and Reppert, 2011;el Jundi et al, 2015;Jayaraman, 2013, 2015;Turner-Evans et al, 2017;Varga and Ritzmann, 2016;Weir and Dickinson, 2015;Pegel et al, 2018Pegel et al, , 2019. In flies, visual responsiveness of certain CX neurons depends on the animal's behavioral state (Seelig and Jayaraman, 2013;Weir and Dickinson, 2015;Turner-Evans et al, 2017).…”