240 PHYSIOLOGY OF CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. 



also in the cases of atrophy, in which probably the condition devel- 

 ops slowly through a number of years, a degree of ataxia is ex- 

 hibited, especially when the movements are rapid and forced. 

 In the ataxic condition resulting from tabetic lesions of the 

 posterior funiculi the effect upon the movements is increased 

 by covering up the eyes (Romberg's symptom), the individual 

 being then deprived of his visual stimuli as well as those coming 

 by way of the muscular and cutaneous nerves. In cerebellar 

 ataxia, however, the effect is not increased by closure of the 

 eyes, a result which is probably explained by the fact that the 

 individual still possesses his paths of muscular and cutaneous 

 sensibility to the cerebrum, and these senses may be used in the 

 reflex adjustments of voluntary movements. 



Interpretation of the Experimental and Clinical Results. 

 Flourens was led by the striking results of his operations on pigeons 

 to suggest the view that the cerebellum is an organ for the co- 

 ordination of the movements of equilibrium and locomotion. 

 Objections were raised to this view. Some observers (Dal ton, 

 Weir Mitchell) found that if the pigeons from which the cerebellum 

 had been removed were kept long enough the effects first observed 

 gradually disappeared, so that finally the animals were able to 

 move or fly with no marked difference from the normal animal 

 except that fatigue was shown much more quickly. Hence the 

 view advocated by Mitchell that the essential function of the 

 cerebellum is that of an augmenting apparatus for the voluntary 

 movements. With regard to this view it may be remarked in 

 passing that pigeons with the cerebral hemispheres removed exhibit 

 apparently as a permanent symptom the same tendency to rapid 

 fatigue after sustained muscular effort. By the same logical process 

 therefore one might conclude that one function of the cerebrum 

 is that of an augmenting organ to the motor discharges from the 

 cerebellum or midbrain. So also the cases of complete or nearly 

 complete atrophy of the cerebellum in human beings in which no 

 evil result follows other than a slight degree of cerebellar ataxia 

 have been used as an argument against the view that this organ 

 is necessary to the co-ordination of the complex voluntary move- 

 ments. The view that the cerebellum has essentially a direct 

 co-ordinating function has been criticized most seriously by Luciani. 

 This observer made a series of long-continued and most careful 

 observations upon dogs and monkeys in which the entire cere- 

 bellum or certain definite parts had been removed. He lays stress 

 upon the fact that the violent disturbance of movement is tem- 

 porary and is slowly recovered from in time. He was led, therefore, 

 to view these disturbances as due primarily not to the loss of the nor- 



