Those numbers are not percentages. They are the pulse width in milliseconds. You can change just one, and it will only affect the cranking pulsewidth for that temperature and nearby temps.
Say you have the following
80 degrees 4
60 degrees 2
40 degrees 4
At 60 degrees, your cranking pulse will be 2ms. At 80 degrees it will be 4ms. It will also be 4ms at 40 degrees. At 50 or 70 degrees, it will be 3ms. At 55 or 65 degrees, it will be 2.5ms And at 45 or 75 degrees, it will be 3.5ms. There's a linear interpolation between the different set values.
For now, focus on the temperature values that best match the outside temperature (engine cold temperature. Get those right, and then guess the rest. Take advantage of abnormally hot or cold days to tune the rest of them. I foudn that it's actually helpful to stick my bike in the garage overnight with the AC on high in order to tune the lower values. Of course, I live in Texas.
Fred