“…While the assumption of strong parallel fiber inputs on Purkinje cells and inhibition as a sculpting lateral mechanism continues to dominate modern cerebellar theories (Mauk and Ohyama, 2004; Hong and Optican, 2008), there is actually little experimental evidence that natural patterns of afferent cortical activation actually produce beam-like patterns of either excited or inhibited Purkinje cells (Bell and Grimm, 1969; Eccles et al, 1972; Bower and Woolston, 1983; Kolb et al, 1997; Cohen and Yarom, 1998; De Jaeger and Proteau, 2003; Holtzman et al, 2006; Heck et al, 2007; Rokni et al, 2007; de Solages et al, 2008). Instead Purkinje cells either activated or inhibited by peripheral stimuli are found in patches, not beams (Eccles et al, 1972; Bower and Woolston, 1983; Gao et al, 2006) whose locations, when measured, are found to be in close proximity to activated regions of the granule cell layer (Bower and Woolston, 1983; Kolb et al, 1997; Cohen and Yarom, 1998; De Jaeger and Proteau, 2003; Lu et al, 2005; Rokni et al, 2007; Brown and Ariel, 2009).…”