Again, just to be absolutely clear: I am not saying that any speaker is better than any other. I am saying that one should not trust a salesman when he produces data that attempts to convince you his wares are better than another salesman's wares at a fraction of the price.
Of course I won't trust "that data", but I'll trust the 3rd party measurements that support the data... where in my post the last two well measuring speakers, were Pioneer and PSBs respectively, not Harman brand speakers at all. All I suggested was that if a speaker measures well off axis, and is voiced flat on axis, it's a lot harder for a speaker to win in a blind test against other such speakers, whereas speakers' measurements are a mess, like the Wilson, B&W, and Klipsch speakers I posted, then in the blind test they won't be favoured.
Where does that show anything suggesting the Manufacturer's speakers always win their tests? All it shows is that the well-measuring speakers beat the less well measuring speakers, like you'd hope they would.
Don't trust a company's studies when the only ones it ever produces show that its products are the best.
It really isn't about showing the P363 were "the best", though - the number of speaker samples used is statistically insignificant. It was just showing that people in a blind test, even teenagers, gravitate towards the speaker the measures better on and off axis. The focus of this study was to show that teenagers don't inherently "prefer" bad sound - even though that's a common perception in the audio world including the mixing community.
That doesn't mean the P363 is the best measuring speaker at its price point even. It's possible, but the point is just that there wasn't the expected preference towards "boom n sizzle" or "MP3"
You're kind of missing that, and too caught up in company A vs company B/C/D.
There's a lot that can be learned from Harman or NRC or even BBC research, without the assumption that Harman or NRC or BBC speakers are subsequently the best.