1. The aim of the present study is to describe the behaviour of identified second-order vestibular neurones in the alert cat during eye saccades. A selection of neurones which are involved in horizontal eye movements has been made. The activity has been compared with a selected sample of abducens motoneurones recorded in the same animals. 2. Alert head-fixed cats were used for this study. Eye movements were recorded by the scleral search coil technique. Abducens motoneurones were identified by antidromic stimulation from the VIth nerve with chronically implanted electrodes. They were recorded extracellularly. 3. Second-order vestibular neurones were identified by orthodromic stimulation from the vestibular organs. They were recorded intra-axonally and injected with horseradish peroxidase after recording of their physiological characteristics. Their morphology was reconstructed from frozen sections. 4. All the recorded vestibular neurones showed various amounts of eye position sensitivity. The firing rate (F) - horizontal eye position (H) characteristics are compared for abducens and vestibular neurones. The population average values are F = 33 + 4 H for motoneurones and F = 51 + 2.4 H for vestibular neurones. 5. All recorded vestibular neurones showed an increase of discharge rate during contralateral horizontal saccades and a strong decrease or pause during ipsilateral saccades. Firing rate - horizontal eye velocity sensitivity has been calculated. 6. Results suggest a strong inhibitory input on vestibular neurones from the saccadic generator. This mechanism underlies the suppression of the vestibulo-ocular reflex during saccades. Our results suggest that in the cat, for saccades of amplitude smaller than 20 deg, there is a variable degree of suppression which is provided by a projection of excitatory bursters (EBNs) on second-order vestibular neurones through inhibitory type II neurones. 7. We also conclude from this study that the eye position sensitivity of vestibular second-order neurones is in fact a motor signal indicating a motor error, i.e. the amount of head or eye movement which remains to be done in order to align gaze on target with the eyes centred in the orbit.