So this will be a reply that doesn't help much, be warned, but good discussion
Timing is of course determined by a range of mechanical things in an engine that affect how a flame front travels combined with dynamic stuff that occurs (internal port resonance, overlap/5th cycle stuff, etc) If fuel #1 behaves the same as fuel #2 once ignited, having more octane wouldn't mean the engine wants more (or less) advance
That being said, racers and dyno guys will know this better than me, but I think Paulie is right, it is not an octane issue, it's a fuel burn issue, and I believe that different fuels, even those race fuels with the same octane value, burn completely different and have a different timing requirement for max power.
It'd be interesting to hear from racers and/or dyno guys that have played with different race fuel belnds, however, I am pretty sure it is not the octane rating, but fuel composition and burn that matters.