Your speakers, your room, the speakers' position in your room, your listening position as well as a myriad of other factors will determine the response of your speakers at your listening position. As a result, there's no way that any sort of "generic" DSP setting could possibly do you any good as there are so many variables at work.
If you are interested in digital room correction you need a measurement mic, software for taking the measurements (some which is free), and an understanding of what the measurements mean when taken correctly. Very interesting stuff if you like to understand how and why we hear what we hear......but it's not the kind of thing you pick up over night.
That said, I don't want to discourage you! You might try by changing the graphic equalizer settings (with clip protection selected) while listening and see what happens when you make changes to different frequency bands. If you want to go more in-depth there are a few good measurement mics and preamps out there for fairly cheap, and there's a ton of info on the web about how to go about it correctly.