Previous studies of the maturation of periodic breathing cycle duration (PCD) with postnatal age in infants have yielded conflicting results. PCD is reported to fall in term infants over the first 6 mo postnatally, whereas in preterm infants PCD is reported either not to change or to fall. Contrary to measured values, use of a theoretical respiratory control model predicts PCD should increase with postnatal age. We re-examined this issue in a longitudinal study of 17 term and 22 preterm infants. PCD decreased exponentially from birth in both groups, reaching a plateau between 4 and 6 mo of age. In preterm infants, PCD fell from a mean of 18.3 s to 9.8 s [95% confidence interval (CI) is Ϯ 3.2 s]. In term infants, PCD fell from 15.4 s to 10.1 s (95% CI is Ϯ 3.1 s). The higher PCD at birth in preterm infants, and the similar PCD value at 6 mo in the two groups, suggest a more rapid maturation of PCD in preterm infants. This study confirms that PCD declines after birth. The disagreement between our data and theoretical predictions of PCD may point to important differences between the respiratory controller of the infant and adult. E xperimental evidence is accumulating that PB in the infant, as in the adult, is caused by instability in the respiratory control system, possibly mediated by increased hypoxic stimulation of the peripheral chemoreflex feedback loop during the early postnatal period (1,2). Furthermore, math modeling studies of respiratory control based on a downscaling of adult cardiorespiratory time constants to the infant (3,4) support such a conclusion. Of interest, the theoretical model of Khoo et al. (3) predicts that the PCD should increase progressively with age from approximately 18 s at birth to an adult value in excess of 30 s.Surprisingly, most infant data contradict this model prediction, with three longitudinal studies in term infants (5-7) and one small study in preterm infants (1) reporting that PCD decreases significantly from birth to 6 mo postnatally. However, another cross-sectional study of selected long epochs of PB in a larger group of preterm infants studied just before discharge from the nursery reported that PCD showed no trend or a weakly increasing trend over the first 3 mo postnatally (8); while the results of this study could be interpreted as conforming with the predictions of the Khoo model scaled to the infant, we have argued previously that the study design may have biased the outcome (1).To resolve the issue as to whether PCD decreases or increases with postnatal age, further longitudinal studies were warranted in a larger population of term and preterm infants. Based on our earlier studies, and consistent with recent findings that the ventilatory response to CO 2 becomes brisker with age (9), we hypothesized that the reduction in PCD commencing at birth and completed by 6 mo postnatally in both term and preterm infants represents a similar adaptation to air breathing and is mediated principally by changes in the response time of the peripheral chemoreceptors. ...