theoretical system. Its implications are translatable into more familiar concepts and methods of psychological inquiry and are equally capable of interfacing with other theoretical formulations" (p. 809- 810). Ware, Yokomoto, and Paul (1984), in a study extending the research on behavioral construct validation of the MBTI, tested 50 subjects using two standard laboratory perceptual motor tasks, the mirror star tracing apparatus and the stylus or finger maze. They found extroverts "consistently performed faster and with fewer errors on the star trac- ing, though not on the maze" (p. 27). One important objective of this study was to determine if theoretically congruent subjects differed from theoretically incongruent subjects, and they found a significant difference in the two groups (p < .01). This suggests that type differences may influence performance in selected perceptual motor tasks, and, more specifically, that the extent of the behavior may be related to theoretical congruence. Holsworth (1985) in a study of perceptual style correlates of the MBTI examined "the relationship between the Jungian perceiving function as measured by the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) and the perceptual style of field dependence/independence as measured by the Group Embedded Figures Test (GEFT)" (p. 32). Field-independent individuals are "capable of overcoming the embedding context of stimulus presentation in order to examine elemental aspects of the field in a novel or creative manner" (p. 32). Results of this study suggest that behavioral cor- relates of perceptual style do exist. Using regression analysis, Holsworth found that "the more intuitive and introverted an individual