Photopic critical flicker frequency (CFF) to green and yellow-red targets became independent of visual field location when the decrease in the density of retinal ganglion cells and increase in their receptive-field size towards the retinal periphery were compensated for by increasing stimulus area in inverse proportion to the human cortical magnification factor squared (M-scaling) and by reducing stimulus luminance in inverse proportion to Ricco's area (F-scaling). In mesopic and scotopic vision CFF to green targets increased monotonically with eccentricity despite MF-scaling. Instead, CFF to MF-scaled yellow-red targets that predominantly stimulated cones was independent of eccentricity at all luminance levels tested.