Ten untreated patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy and age- and sex-matched normals between the ages of 20 and 71 years underwent pupillometric analyses immediately prior to each of five multiple sleep latency test sessions. Although narcoleptics were sleepier as indicated both by their latencies to sleep onset, the baseline pupil diameter, their latencies to sleep onset, the baseline pupil diameter, pupillary light reflex, and pupillary orienting response did not differentiate between groups. Narcoleptics did, however, exhibit a significantly greater frequency of spontaneous oscillations in the dark-adapted state than did controls. These findings indicate that pupillary stability may serve as a supplementary diagnostic tool for nacrolepsy-cataplexy. The results are discussed with the view that psychosensory restoration of alertness, among other extraneous variables, must be controlled when utilizing pupillometric techniques. A review of the literature indicates a variety of methodological and statistical shortcomings that must be amended. Suggestions are made for improving the reliability and validity of the pupillometric approach.