I pay a lot of attention to how steep the three respective hills are, and to what amount they're fully independent, versus how much they overlap lower down. That tells me a lot about how specific negative films differ. I the case of Ektar you get rather cleanly separated steep peaks, which indicates a rather contrasty film with crisply defined hues, which is, of course, exactly what Ektar is.
By comparison, most color neg films have broader mountains with a fair amount of deliberate crossover lower down, for sake of less contrasty complex skintone reproduction.
But you can learn the same thing from just a little experimentation with these various films.
But I've never paid attention to any midscale neutral plots. Perhaps those were once beneficial for color analyzer settings. Dunno. I do everything via simple test strips instead.