Recently I actually managed to find Floyd Toole's articles on the Harman Audio website:
http://www.harmanaudio.com/all_about_audio/default.asp
You're probably familiar with them but they seem to contain a lot of what he wrote in the loudspeaker book. Again I haven't fully read through these articles yet, but skimming through, at least in some areas, more information is contained than is in the book.
I think that one of the most interesting points is that high Q resonances are less audible than low Q resonances. He states this in the book as well but diagrams are provided in the Harman article. This observation is directly in contradiction with what I've read previously in other books:
'The apparent contradiction between perception and measurement, then, begins with the observation that, as conventionally measured, the frequency response is a “steady-state” measurement, showing the resonance outputs at their maximum amplitude. With music, high-Q resonances are rarely driven to their maximum outputs, and so are less audible than the measurement indicates. The problem is not that the measurements are wrong, or irrelevant, it is that they are non-linearly related to the perceptual mechanism in humans, and therefore must be interpreted.
...An interesting fact now emerges: that the conventional method of specifying the excellence of frequency response - ± x dB – is almost useless unless the tolerance is very, very small. For equal audibility, high-Q phenomena could be ± 5 dB, while moderate-Q resonances could be ± 3 dB and low-Q and other broadband deviations could be ± 0.5 dB. Clearly, frequency response curves must be interpreted, there is no simple “catchall” kind of tolerance specification that is truly meaningful. Such is life.'
- 'Audio: Science in the Service of Art', by Floyd Toole. Page 12.