The influence of central inspiratory drive on heart rate variability was investigated in young human subjects using power spectral analysis of R-R intervals. 2. The area of the high-frequency component occurring at the respiratory frequency (0.2-0.25 Hz) in the power spectral density curves was used as an index of respiratory sinus arrhythmia. 3. Central inspiratory drive was increased by breathing a CO2-enriched (5%) gas mixture and this condition was compared with a similar degree of ventilation produced voluntarily. 4. Tests were conducted on eight young subjects with and without low-dose scopolamine (scopoderm TTS) in a double-blind cross-over trial. 5. Scopolamine decreased heart rate and increased the high-frequency peak, suggesting that its main action on the cardiac vagal pathway was a peripheral one, possibly increasing the efficacy of vagal impulses on the cardiac pacemaker. 6. With scopolamine, CO2 breathing increased the area of the high-frequency component significantly more than a similar degree of ventilatory movements produced by voluntary hyperventilation. 7. It is concluded that respiratory sinus arrhythmia in humans is at least partly dependent on a central respiratory-cardiac coupling, most probably similar to that shown in animal studies.