Hi, I've mentioned this before, but the color channels, as "seen" by the RA4 paper, ARE apparently parallel. If you've ever seen my posts on overexposing of Portra film I give a first-hand account of studio testing where we could color balance optical RA4 prints (on professional papers), matching flesh highlights to within 1cc color, and finding that we could get nearly dead on color matches from roughly 1 stop underexposed to around 3 to 4 stops overexposed. When I say dead-on, I mean that professional color correctors, viewing prints in a proper color booth, essentially cannot tell them apart. I don't believe this would be possible without parallel response curves. The reason that the plotted curves, as in film data sheets, are NOT parallel is because they are done with a certain narrow densitometer response, called Status M. For reference, Giorgianni, formerly of Kodak, explains the same thing in his book. So the densitometer curves end up not being parallel, and probably scanner curves are even different from this (unless the scanner has a Status M response).
Ps, I'm doubtful that the wide exposure range/matching color can be achieved in a Jobo processor, largely because of the sparse developer volumes. My experience has been in machines where the tank volume is large enough that it would take a considerable amount of heavily overexposed film to put even a slight blip on a control chart.