The Pew study, conducted every five-or-so years since 1987, uses polling and analysis to reimagine how Americans would cluster around ideas if they were not grouped into two political parties. Pew then created nine ideological categories in an attempt to more clearly define where people actually stand. "It's an effort to sort the public not just in the Democratic and Republican lanes that we're all so used to," said Jocelyn Kiley, director of research on U.S. politics at the Pew Research Center. Kiley said a core motivating question is "what if people didn't automatically have political parties and you just identified groups based on their political values." The 9 groups identified are (from left to right, top to bottom of the chart): Order and Opportunity Left (18%) Loyal Liberals (11%) Leftward Progressives (7%) Pragmatic and Polite Right (11%) Tuned Out Middle (9%) Left-Out Left (12%) No Apologies Right (9%) Faith First Conservatives (12%) Unconventional Right (12%) You can take a cute quiz here that will sort you into one of these 9 groups based on your values.