Fig. 9. Both the visual and wind stimuli shaped fly orientation. The orientation
predicted by a preference for wind is indicated by the blue bars and that
predicted by FOC orientation is indicated by the red bars. Each row represents
a change in the location of the FOC with the bottom row corresponding to the
orientation behavior measured while the visual arena was dark. Numerical
values above and to the right of the labeled panels are mean preference
indices ±s.d. Orientation could, in general, be described as a
compromise between the two competing stimuli with orientation being
increasingly biased towards the wind with increasing wind velocity, and
increasingly favoring the FOC with increasing expansion velocity.