“…It has been found in several experiments (for a review, see AdamsWebber, 1990a), that when people categorize other persons on the basis of bipolar constructs, they tend to assign them, on average, to positive poles ( e g , h p p y ) approximately 62% of the time. This result was obtained by a number of investigators using both elicited and supplied constructs and real and imaginary figures, and it was found not only with adults, but also with children and adolescents of every age between 8 and 19 in Canada, England, Poland, Trinidad, and the United States (Adams-Webber, 1978,1979,1992bAdams-Webber & Benjafield, 1973;Adams-Webber & Rodney, 1983;Benjafield & AdamsWebber, 1975,1976Benjafield & Green, 1978;Frey & Adams-Webber, 1992;Kahgee, et al, 1982;Leach, 1979;Lee, 1989;Lee & Adams-Webber, 1987;Leenaars, 1981;Lefebvre et al, 1986;Marczewska, 1983;Rigdon & Epting, 1982;Romany & Adams-Webber, 1981;Soldz, 1990;Tuohy, 1987;Tuohy & Stradling, 1987;and Walton, 1982). As Lefebvre (1992a) recently put it, "research in this area has led to the discovery that the frequency of 0.62 has a special persistence in statistics of binary choice" Benjafield and I (Benjafield & Adams-Webber, 1976) hypothesized that the exact theoretical value of this proportion is (45 -1)/2 = 0.6180 .…”