The slow compensatory phases of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in the rabbit tend to drift and the drift reverses the direction. This periodic alternating drift (PAD) has two peculiar characteristics: (1) it is induced by sinusoidal vestibular stimulation in naive animals, being evoked immediately after stimulus onset and persisting after the end of stimulation; (2) the peak velocity and period of the drift are dependent on stimulus amplitude. PAD of the rabbit has strong similarities with PAN, a periodic alternating nystagmus observed in humans with cerbellar disorders and in monkeys after nodulo-uvulectomy, although its peak velocity is smaller. It is hypothesized that PAD is due to a slight instability, caused by vestibular stimulation in darkness, of the cerebellar adaptive loop, which exerts a variable gain control on the time constant of the velocity storage integrator.