If you have applied the process to a Preview of the image, then all you need to do is adjust the sliders of that process and reapply. The effect is instantaneous. I don't see what the problem is
Take your image, grab the 'side tab' and drag'n'drop it just below its current location, and a full-image preview window will be created. MAKE SURE YOU THEN CLICK ON THIS NEW PREVIEW TAB TO MAKE THE PREVIEW ACTIVE. (If you can still see the green 'preview outline rectangle' then you are still looking at the ORIGINAL 'parent' image).
Pick your process of choice. Pre-apply a mask to the image if you wish - the mask is ALSO automatically applied to the Preview as well
Set the process parameters, and apply the process (drag and drop the triangle, to the Preview window, or just click the square, or hit key F6 - the latter two options apply the process to the HIGHLIGHTED image, obviating the need for the drag'n'drop inconvenience). The Preview image is altered - the original image remains unaffected.
Change the process parameters. Hit F6 again. The data from the ORIGINAL image is re-processed and the result appears in the Preview image. In other words you will NOT see the second process being applied OVER the results of the first process. You can even apply a totally different process - it will STILL use the original image data, modify it in some way, and then display the result in the Preview window.
And, you can use the quick Undo/Redo button that is available on the toolbar - which ONLY works on a process applied to a Preview (unlike the Ctrl-Z/Ctrl-Y buttons that work on a 'live' image, but which require you to move the mouse between two different buttons on the toolbar). In other words you can 'blink' between the 'before' and 'after' states with a stationary mouse and single clicks.
And, if you 'like what you see' you have two choices:
1.) Drag the preview side-tag to the workspace background to automatically create a brand new image, and then carry on processing (I really love this feature, as I can save images and processing histories at different stages of my workflow)
or
2.) Click the 'live' image tab on the window you were working with (you will see the Green 'Preview' outline reappear) and just re-apply the process - except, to the 'Live' image this time
Further, if you really want to be able to 'fade' a process - why not just create, and use, a full-frame mask comprising a 'single shade of grey'? PixelMath will do this in an instant. Use something like $T =
k, where
k is a value between 0.0 and 1.0; and apply the PixelMath to your image, using the 'Create New Image' option, to leave the original image untouched, but the new image having the same physical properties as the original one. (((By the way - this is just one of my 'thought experiments' - I have NOT tried it, because I have never yet had a need to)))
Cheers,