The differences in directionality are only reported in a DC circuit. The AC measurement do not have a direction 1 and direction 2 measurement, because in an AC circuit there is no directionality. The flow of current changes direction 60 times per second.
Even the difference in directionality in the DC circuit are methodologically suspect.
First, the report does not say if the best measurement for the allegedly directional fuses correspond with the recommended direction. If you do two measurements there will always be a random difference between two measurements. To proof directionality, you need a batch of allgedly directional fuses, measure each one multiple time and show that the recommended direction measures better within statistical margins of error. There is no indication at all this is what they did. The report does not even say what the standard diviation is for the measurements, and therefore you cannot tell whether or not the differences are statisically significant or random.
Second, the difference between direction 1 and direction 2 measurement is higher in the non directional cheap fuses, than in the allegedly directional high end fuses. If the expensive fuses were explicitly designed to be directional, you would expect the exact opposite.
In conclusion, directionality of fuses in AC circuit is bogus, and in DC circuit highly suspect.