Static differential light thresholds were measured as a function of stimulus size (Goldmann sizes I-V) along four visual field meridia (75, 165, 255 and 345 degrees) with the Humphrey Field Analyzer 640. Data were obtained for both young (n = 10, age 23.6 +/- 2.9 years) and elderly (n = 10, age 72.0 +/- 5.2 years) normal subjects. The resulting peripheral spatial summation curves could be equated to the foveal data simply by a change in size scale, which increased linearly with eccentricity. E2 values, expressing the eccentricity at which stimulus size must double for performance to remain comparable to the fovea, were in the order of 3-9 degrees. Whilst the rate of scale change is approximately the same for both young and elderly observers, differences in performance can be explained by a combination of lower sensitivity and a bias in sensitivity towards larger stimulus sizes with increasing age.