Sorry, in a less douchy response:
o you need to change any Ohms settings on a receiver so that the impedance is matched to the speaker ohms?
It's kind of hard to say. Impedance settings on receivers AFAIK are designed mainly to limit overall voltage into lower impedances, thus keeping current controlled. Of course the consequence of this is limited output.
The other option is to leave it at the higher impedance setting. This will mean that voltage is unrestrained, but it also means that frequencies in which do have lower dips than frequencies which are higher in impedance will sound different. This can include increased harmonic distortion, reduced driver control, reduced dynamic capability, and awkward frequency response at higher volumes.
My advice is, if you've got 8 or 6 ohm speakers, leave it at the 8 ohm setting. If you've got speakers with low impedance dips, try both settings and see if one sounds better than the other, otherwise buy a separate amplifier like an emotiva UPA-2 for example. Any receiver which feels uncomfortable with a 4 ohm load and requires a separate setting for it is simply not naturally designed for low impedance.