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The optomotor response is an innate behaviour common to all insects. It serves for course stabilization during free locomotion through an involuntary displacement from a straight course<ref>Lehrer, M. (1993). Spatial vision in the honeybee: the use of different cues in different tasks. Vision Research, 34, 2363-2385.</ref>. The purpose of this behaviour is to regain the desired course of locomotion.
The optomotor response is an innate behaviour common to all insects. It serves for course stabilization during free locomotion through an involuntary displacement from a straight course<ref>Lehrer, M. (1993). Spatial vision in the honeybee: the use of different cues in different tasks. Vision Research, 34, 2363-2385.</ref>. The purpose of this behaviour is to regain the desired course of locomotion.


==Notes==
==Reference==
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Revision as of 17:34, 8 January 2009

The optomotor response is an innate behaviour common to all insects. It serves for course stabilization during free locomotion through an involuntary displacement from a straight course[1]. The purpose of this behaviour is to regain the desired course of locomotion.

Reference

  1. ^ Lehrer, M. (1993). Spatial vision in the honeybee: the use of different cues in different tasks. Vision Research, 34, 2363-2385.