The difference in wear between the front and rear banks is because of the firing polarity difference created by the waste-spark ignition system. Each of the three ignition coils fires two plugs, one on each end of the high voltage secondary winding. One plug fires the center electrode at positive polarity, the other fires the center electrode at negative polarity, which causes metal to erode and transfer in different directions between the center and ground electrodes of the plug. Those are some of the best photographs I've seen of this phenomena; the plugs with recessed center electrodes have a lot of the center's Platinum/Iridium alloy spattered on the ground electrodes, while the other three plugs are pretty clean.
If you do some research, you'll discover that Bosch does not recommend using their Platinum +4 plugs with waste spark ignition systems. They also don't recommend using them on boosted engines or engines using nitrous oxide.
When Ford delivered the first Taurus SHO's and Thunderbird Super Coupes with waste spark ignitions (low data rate DIS), the OEM spark plugs were supplied selectively tipped with Platinum. Three plugs were tipped on the center electrode, the other three had a Pt button on the ground electrode. You couldn't buy these plugs from Ford or in the aftermarket, everything supplied in the aftermarket was designated "PP". meaning both electrodes were Platinum tipped.