I was aware of the article in Stereophile years ago which "debunked" short-term thermal compression, but the methodology in the test was flawed because it looked at the average compression over time, rather than the rapid-onset compression that Linkwitz's test reveals.
"Bigger voice coil, more ventilation, lower power dissipation result in lower dynamic compression."
That's my understanding as well, but JBL went a step further in their M2 studio monitor: They use an alloy in the woofer's voice coil whose resistance stays essentially constant as it heats up. I'm not sure whether they did this for the compression drivers' dual voice coils as well. Anyway that seems to me like a brilliant idea which would be especially welcome in high-end audio speakers where efficiencies are lower and therefore voice coils are smaller.
For the record, my own priorities are much more focused on speaker/room interaction, and the types of drivers which do what I want in that area just happen to be fairly high efficiency.
Duke