Here is a comment from Matt Corrallo that explains why Peter R's research should not be considered to make our decisions. Again, it might add up in a vacuum under precise conditions but is not applicable to reality.
If, for example, the majority of miners are in China (they are), and there is really poor connectivity in and out of China (there is) and a miner naively optimizes for profit, they will create blocks which are large and take a while to relay out of China. By simple trial-and-error an individual large miner might notice that when they create larger blocks which fork off miners in other parts of the world, they get more income.
http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2015-May/008364.html