Ron S, Nemet P
Doc Ophthalmol. 1977 Apr 29;43(1):109-14. doi: 10.1007/BF01569296.
It was assumed that the cerebellum is not essential for eye movements, playing only a modifying and influencing role. Recently it has been shown that the directions of the saccades can be related to a stimulated cerebellar site. This study was done on patients who underwent partial vermis and hemisphere ablations as a result of severe cranial or cerebellar tumors. The results further indicate that lack that lack of some cerebellar neural structure affects the nature of the saccade: it does not move the eyes in one saccade to acquire the new target and its amplitude duration relationship changes. It is suggested that cerebellar cortex generates a neural pulse based on teleceptive information about stimulus location with respect to an observer's head, corrects this information for initial eye position and sends out a signal to the saccadic pulse generators which move the eyes to acquire the new target.