I haven't yet read the two articles, but I think it's worth commenting on BMXTRIX's graph. This is, I believe, for discerning the smallest resolution possible with good eyesight at the viewing distance?
What I mean to say is that the effective resolution of the source material definition will vary according to the source quality. This probably can be thought of like a Shannon limit on cramming as much resolution into a signal as possible. This means that some well-produced standard definition source material can be viewed at the equivalent movie projector SMPTE/THX viewing distance (with a good rescaler).
For instance, the Star Wars Trilogy DVD's approach the limits of quality available with standard definition, and so are watchable at a close viewing distance. With uncompressed source material it can be difficult to distinguish differences between 720p, 1080i and 1080p, even at a close viewing distance:
HDTV. EBU TECHNICAL REVIEW – October 2006. 1 / 8. H. Hoffmann. Hans Hoffmann. EBU Technical Department.
http://www.ebu.ch/en/technical/trev/trev_308-hdtv.pdf