Correct me if I’m wrong but I don’t read the study you cited as supporting your point that “most people still prefer a very negative Duv at all CCTs.”

Page 16 of the DOE study: “The simple interpretation from a visual examination of Figures 4 through 7, which show mean data for each color rendition condition and for each chromaticity group, is that Duv has an effect on perceived normalness and preference at lower CCTs (2700 K), with negative Duv values being perceived as more normal and more preferred. The effect of Duv is negligible at 4300 K.” I don’t think I’m taking this quote out of context as it’s repeated almost verbatim in the final conclusions of the article. The study overall seems to conclude that Duv and CCT are not the most useful variables in predicting consumer light quality preferences: “CCT and Duv should not be used alone as factors in a model of color preference; adding both offers a small increase in predictive value for IES TM-30-15-based models of color preference.”

The LRC study also, as you stated, found that participants found positive-Duv to more closely resemble “untinted white light” above 4000k; negative-Duv below 4000k. The NIST research does appear to track more closely with your claim, but that’s 1 among 3 studies—so the weight of your own evidence is moreso against your claim, as I read it. Unless you meant strictly “most people prefer negative Duv at 2700k/incandescent light levels.”