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Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) was examined in aerobically trained (AT) and untrained (NT) college-aged males during 12 periods consisting of a 3-min sitting baseline, six common 3-min absolute exercise stages, and five 3-min recovery stages that followed voluntary exhaustion to determine the relationship of work and training status to parasympathetic influence upon the heart. RSA systematically decreased during absolute exercise, was observed at heart rates (HR) above 100 beats.min(-1), and progressively increased during recovery. Additionally independent of work stages, comparative regression analyses were conducted for both the exercise and recovery phases, separately, in which HR was regressed on RSA, as well as RSA on %(V) over dot(2max), to contrast the obtained relationships for the AT and NT. No differences were revealed as a function of endurance training status as the slopes and intercepts obtained for the two groups from each of these analyses were similar. The within-subject correlations between RSA and %(V) over dot (2max), calculated for each of the individuals across all 12 periods, were consistently negative. Between-subjects correlations of RSA with RR and tidal volume were predominantly nonsignificant, indicating that RSA, as measured here, is independent of individual differences in ventilatory activity and, as such, san be compared between groups during exercise. The findings demonstrate that RSA is detectable during both exercise and recovery even at HR beyond 100 beats.min(-1), and reveals a similar relationship to HR and metabolic state in both aerobically trained and untrained populations