I know what you mean, but haven't you got it backwards? If you are on the flat part of the curve, (i.e. the shock is well extended,) then there is comparatively little shock movement for any given movement of the wheel and so less damping, not more.
It helps me to think of it (in as much as I can think at all) as a direct connection (without the linkage) but one where the bottom shock mount moves out along the swing arm towards the wheel as the shock compresses. At any point, it's a simple moment calculation then. If you had a linkage chart like the one you posted above you could do several calcs and plot your own curve for for any set up.
I thought about exactly that last night and I must have been tired as i concluded that the air spring is linear too. Of course it's not. It's asymptotic to zero volume.
However, that only affects the spring rate - the damping is still linear and so a damping adjustment should not be necessary with a preload change.
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