Abstract— –Video‐microscope studies provide further evidence that Chlamydomonas can become oriented in response to a single short flash of light. Following a flash, 50% of the cells in a negatively phototactic population undergo a transient deflection in swimming path (‘turn response’), 10% show a ‘stop response’, and 40% continue to swim straight ahead. The direction of turning is related to the direction of the stimulus; a majority of cells turn away from the flash source. Repetitive flashing at 60 per s elicits oriented swimming, indistinguishable from that observed with continuous light. Responses at the onset of repetitive flashing resemble single‐flash responses, reinforcing the idea that response to a single flash corresponds to the initial stages of orientation to continuous light. A stop response sometimes occurs at the onset of orientation to repetitive flashing, but it is apparently not an essential component of orientation. The fact that only 60% of the cells turn or stop in response to a flash is consistent with the hypothesis that light direction is perceived by comparing light absorbed in one photoreceptive region at two instants in time (before and during the flash). The only cells to turn or to stop would be those in which the photoreceptor organelle is appropriately oriented at the instant of the flash. Copyright © 1979, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved