You can buy a Kill-A-Watt meter for $25-$30 to measure them directly.
I don't know of any public measurement doc of such devices.
Generally anything with motor is likely inductive load but there are a lot of new air conditioners and refrig that have power factor correction.
TV, computer, and other such electronic devices are generally 0.6 PF but is pulse current spurts due to just rectifying AC mains feeding filter cap to run their switching power supplies. The current spike occurs at as the cap is replenished with charge near peak of input sinewave.
Again, there are more and more switching power supplies that have power factor correction circuitry.