Positive selection has long been thought to be a devise for producing a repertoire of T cells that can efficiently recognize foreign peptides in the context of self-major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. However, in the light of recent evidence that long-term survival of mature T cells requires continuous contact with self-MHC molecules, the possibility for an additional role for positive selection has emerged: to generate a repertoire of T cells that can be maintained in the periphery through contact with self-MHC/peptide ligands. In support of this idea, our recent work suggests that positive selection is highly peptide specific and, more important, that mature T cells require extrathymic contact with the same MHC/peptide ligands that initially induced positive selection in the thymus in order for prolonged survival and to undergo homeostatic proliferation in response to T cell deficiency.