Thank you for the link to the paper. I notice that it is authored by a specific circuit breaker manufacturer and probably testing on fuses would result in the same conclusion. The issue becomes is that this is not a consensus recognized standard for determining incident energy values such as IEEE 1584. The recommendations state that the instantaneous trip function should be used, should be set to the lowest level possible and to be aware that the fault current could be less than the instantaneous range of the breaker. Nothing really new there.
The Summary section states that direct testing provides the most accurate information possible but I would think that it would have to be for a wide range of breakers to be useful in industry applications. Yes, the IEEE 1584 equations result in higher incident energy values over the tested values but I don't think conservative is a bad thing right now. Also the breakers tested were most likely very new from the factory assembly line. How would the values change on a breaker that has been sitting on a shelf for awhile before being used? What about one in service that may have seen some faults? What about one that is in service but has not been operated for 364 days prior to it's one year maintenance?
While the paper is interesting, I would not want to risk using test values from a manufacturer without some sort of standard behind that. Think litigation.