Saccadic eye movements were elicited in 30 schizophrenic patients before and in 17 of these 30 during antipsychotic treatment with neuroleptics, and compared with those of 12 age-matched controls under three different conditions: (a) the gap paradigm, which tests the visually triggered and visually guided saccades; (b) the anti-task paradigm, which tests the internally guided, visually triggered saccades; and (c) the memory paradigm, which tests the internally triggered and guided saccades. Eye movements were recorded by DC electro-oculography, and the peak eye velocities for the different saccades were calculated. We found that antipsychotic treatment with neuroleptics reduces the peak saccadic eye velocity. This effect is larger for internally guided saccades than for externally triggered and guided eye movements. The saccadic velocity of the unmedicated schizophrenic patients did not differ from that of the controls. Since patients with diseases of the basal ganglia primarily show abnormalities of the internally guided and triggered saccades, our findings indicate that neuroleptics influence the oculomotor loop through the basal ganglia and that this loop, by means of neuroleptic influence on the brainstem saccadic burst generator, also influences the peak velocity of the internally guided saccades. This contradicts the current idea of the role of the cortical input to the brainstem saccadic burst generator, which is thought to not be involved in the determination of saccadic velocity.