Journal of neurophysiology
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Neural mechanisms for evoking saccadic eye movements by microstimulation of the posterior vermis were investigated in monkeys trained to fixate a visual target. The low-threshold region from which saccadic eye movements could be evoked with currents less than 10 microA was confined to lobule VII in two monkeys and it included a posterior part of lobule VI (lobule VIc) in another monkey. The region from which saccade-related neural activity was recordable coincided with the low-threshold region. ⋯ In the folia with normal Purkinje cell layers, the amplitude and direction of evoked saccades and the thresholds for evoking such eye movements were almost comparable to the preoperative data. Saccadic eye movements in response to microstimulation of the posterior vermis were caused by orthodromic impulses conveyed through the axons of the Purkinje cells. Insofar as the saccades elicited from lobule VII with currents less than 10 microA are concerned, antidromic activation of the afferent fibers is not the neural mechanisms subserving the oculomotor responses.