The State Department said the two sides yesterday discussed regional terrorist threats, aviation security, information sharing, border security, safeguarding human rights, and countering violent extremism.
Experts also talked about countering improvised explosive devices.
The US side was led by the department's acting coordinator for counter-terrorism Justin Siberell. China's delegation was led by its Foreign Affairs Assistant Minister Li Huilai.
"The United States looks forward to continued counter-terrorism exchanges with China to broaden and deepen cooperation between the two countries," a State Department statement said.
China blames a spike in militant attacks in its restive far west on a group called the Turkestan Islamic Movement.
Rights groups say China plays up the threat of militancy by its ethnic Uighur minority to justify abusive law-enforcement policies and religious restrictions.
Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch, said some of the Chinese government agencies taking part in the dialogue, including the Public Security Bureau and Ministry of State Security, have "deeply problematic human rights track records."
She said China should stop labelling as terrorists peaceful government critics such as Ilham Tohti, an outspoken economics professor and ethnic Uighur, who was sentenced in 2014 to life in prison on separatism charges.
Earlier this year, a State Department report said that during 2015, counter-terrorism cooperation between the US and China remained limited. It said Chinese law enforcement agencies are generally reluctant to conduct joint investigations or share specific threat information.
Cooperation was further constrained by "China's conflation of religious expression with violent extremism," the report said.
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