“…Increasing evidence has suggested for more than half a century that both preferences and orientations are continuously distributed rather than discrete variables (Kinsey, Pomeroy, & Martin, 1948;Kinsey, Pomeroy, Martin, & Gebhard, 1953;Kinsey, Reichert, Cauldwell, & Mozes, 1955;Van Wyk & Geist, 1984). Alternative ways to describe this continuum-like range of preferences and orientations have included (1) using at least five separate categories (Vrangalova & Savin-Williams, 2010 or (2) using two orthogonal (opposite-sex and same-sex) variables that both exist, to some extent, within a single individual Bickham et al, 2007;O'Keefe et al, 2014;Robinett, 2012;Storms, 1980;Stroebel et al, 2013;Whalen, Geary, & Johnson, 1990). …”