Evidence from a number of types of experiments has shown that gradation of muscular contraction is accomplished by changes both in the number of motoneurones active and in the frequency of discharge of individual motoneurones (Creed, Denny-Brown, Eccles, Liddell & Sherrington, 1932). It is also well known that different spinal reflexes have different abilities to excite fractions of the motoneurone pool supplying a particular muscle. On the other hand, there appears to be little information on one important feature of the functional organization of motoneurones particularly relevant to quantitative control of skeletal muscle contraction, namely, the degree of influence various reflex pathways have on a particular motoneurone in comparison to other motoneurones of the same pool.The present study examines the effectiveness of the monosynaptic and several polysynaptic reflex arcs in discharging individual knee flexor motoneurones. These experiments should be useful in indicating whether a given motoneurone responds equally well to different reflex pathways or whether variation in excitation throughout a particular pool is dependent upon the nature of the reflex process. Information on such a point would be valuable in helping to ascertain the manner in which different mechanisms combine to determine the participation of motoneurones in activity. For instance, it has been postulated that a significant control of motoneurone excitability is exerted via the fusimotor (gamma) effect upon the afferent limb on the monosynaptic reflex, the Group I fibres from the muscle spindle (Eldred, Granit & Merton, 1953). Fitting the motor control of the spindle into the framework of mechanisms concerned with the functional organization of motoneurones would require knowledge of how the effectiveness of the monosynaptic drive varies among members of a pool in comparison to other excitatory pathways.The motoneurones studied were taken from the pool monosynaptically excited by Group I volleys from the peripheral nerves supplying the