Behavioral contexts can evoke a variety of autonomic modes of response, characterized by reciprocal, coactive, or independent changes in the autonomic divisions. The present study investigated the modes of autonomic response to visual illusion and mental arithmetic tasks, by the use of noninvasive measures of sympathetic (pre-ejection period; PEP) and parasympathetic (respiratory sinus arrhythmia; RSA) cardiac control. As previously demonstrated, mental arithmetic was associated with a reciprocal pattern of sympathetic activation and vagal withdrawal. The illusion task, however, yielded a distinct mode of vagal activation in the absence of sympathetic change. Responses within tasks were reliable. In contrast to the general intertask consistency reported for stress tasks that yield similar autonomic modes of response, however, neither PEP nor RSA responses were correlated across the illusion and arithmetic tasks. This may be attributable to the dissimilar modes of autonomic control evoked by these tasks. The distinct modes of autonomic response to arithmetic; and illusions emphasize the importance of a bivariate model of autonomic control, and may offer important experimental tools for psychophysiological studies of autonomic control.