Schizophrenia patients have ocular motor abnormalities. It has been hypothesized that these abnormalities are associated with frontal eye field pathology. If so, schizophrenia patients should have difficulties decreasing saccadic reaction times in response to predictably moving targets. To evaluate the frontal eye field hypothesis, 25 schizophrenic and 26 nonpsychiatric subjects completed predictive saccadic tracking tasks. The groups demonstrated equivalent decreases in saccadic reaction times over consecutive trials. Schizophrenia patients, however, had faster reaction times and shorter amplitude saccades than nonpsychiatric subjects. The shorter amplitude saccades were made regardless of reaction time, perhaps an antipsychotic medication effect. The reaction time results are unlikely to be an effect of treatment with antipsychotic medication and are inconsistent with the hypothesis that schizophrenia patients have frontal eye field pathology.