I don't have anything bookmarked, probably not too hard to find.
Here is some interesting information; see Acoustics: Cracking the Early/Late Arrival Conundrum
http://jamesromeyn.com/audiokinesis-speaker-design/#philosophy
Thanks for the link. I gave it a quick read and it comes off as a sales pitch for their "house sound". Granted, any manufacturer will pick and choose opinions that favorably promote the sales of their products, including room treatment products.
I am trying to use the accurate reproduction of sound as a baseline which is not always the same as personal preferences and house curves which vary and are many.
When Danny mods speakers and XO's, he appears to aim for a baseline which is a relatively flat frequency response (Danny correct me if I am wrong). This may or may not be everyone's preferential cup of tea as many people, including Toole who promote a tipped frequency response or some other shape. REW's default curve is flat in the middle with slopes on each side. I fall in the flat response camp because I can always tweak it if desired.
This quote seems to support the attempt to reduce early latency smearing.
"... David Greisinger proposes that the less early arriving reflected energy the better. ..."
Then this quote appears to be a sales pitch of their "house sound" (which appears to add a slight artificial reverb).
"... If we compare sound patterns to light, think of the early arriving, constant-directivity signal as a focused light beam, followed about 10 ms later (11.25 feet path length difference) by a flood lamp with its spectrum modified for certain desirable attributes known to maximize performance.
The results are pleasing and addictive. ..."
They didn't use the term accurate reproduction.
If I want DSP effects (such as reverb, cathedral or stadium effects), I want to be able to selectively enable and disable them at will. If it is built into a system, it is much harder to revert back to a neutral baseline, not to mention this added delay is on top of the existing playback venue's reflection delays (so now you have delays on the delays).
Again, I would like to read the articles directly from the sound engineer(s), not a vendor's spin on their interpretations.
My 2 cents.