After reading the following you will see that to prevent decel fuel cutoff you need to avoid completely closing the throttle. This can't be spoofed by adjusting the TPS because adjusting the TPS so that the ECU does not think the throttle plates are closed the ECU will continue to add fuel so there will be little deceleration. Plus, it is engine speed dependent and the table of engine speed is in the ECU software.
Although it is risky to disagree with the good Professor, I am going to do that this time.
Yes, adjusting the TPS to indicate some voltage above the normal idle one will result in the ECU commanding the injectors to squirt more fuel than what is normally used at idle (actually at all throttle positions and RPMs), but this will not result in a higher idle rpm speed, just a richer mixture, since the throttle butterflies will not be opened any more than usual. It takes more O2 to raise the engine rpms up, not just more fuel. In fact, more air alone (with no added fuel) will still raise idle RPMs as can be evidenced by what happens when you pull off a vacuum cap or open the air bypass screws more.
If you happened to also be running a Power Commander on the bike you could then command the ECU to send less fuel across the board and thereby undo that rich condition. But the ECU should still think that you are never on zero throttle during overrun, so would never cut fuel entirely. The result would be a much lessened engine braking during decel and a much smoother transition from throttle off to throttle on since the fuel never gets completely cut. Just like on a carburetted bike.