Explaination of the FourSight Thinking Profile Neutral Zone
Every FourSight profile has a gray bar that runs horizontally through the graph. We call that the “neutral zone.” It appears at a different place in every profile, because we determine your neutral zone by finding the midpoint between your highest and lowest scores. Then we draw a horizontal line 2.5 points above that midpoint and another line 2.5 points below to create a five point range. Five points represents one standard deviation in the FourSight assessment, meaning that within a 5-point range, you aren’t likely to notice a difference in FourSight preference. But a difference of more than 5 points, you are likely to notice. Thus, any point that falls above your neutral zone is high preference for you. And any point that falls below it will be a low preference.