“…Encoding both fast and slow motion places extensive demands on the neuronal networks underlying self-motion detection. Neurons that respond robustly to patterns of wide-field motion have been studied in several insect groups, including Dipteran flies (Hausen, 1982;Hausen and Egelhaaf, 1989), moths (Wicklein and Varju, 1999;Theobald et al, 2010;Stöckl et al, 2016), and bees (DeVoe et al, 1982;Ibbotson, 1991;Mertes et al, 2014). Typified by lobula plate tangential cells (LPTCs) of Dipteran flies, these neurons take input from local elementary motion detection (EMD) elements located in the medulla (Borst et al, 2010) and use local correlation of spatially separated inputs with asymmetric delay mechanisms, consistent with influential computational motion models (Hassenstein and Reichardt, 1956; Barlow and Levick, 1965;Gruntman et al, 2018).…”