There have been very few studies which have measured the physical forces generated by cells during active movements. A special micropipette system has been designed to make it possible to observe cell motion within the pipette and to apply a pressure to counter the chemotactic migration of the cell. This provides a direct measure of the locomotion force generated by the cell. The average velocity of forward motion is 0.33 microns/s in the absence of counter-pressure. The application of a positive counter-pressure (C-P) causes a decrease in the velocity of the forward motion of the cell. At 17 cm H2O of C-P, the cell velocity drops to zero and even moves backward with a higher C-P. The results show that the decrement of velocity is linearly related to the magnitude of the C-P with a complete stoppage at a pressure of 17 cm H2O which corresponds to a force of 0.003 dyn. The maximum work rate of the cell is approximately 2.5 x 10(-8) erg/s.