You're most likely to find the answer in the StAX API sections within the Java Web Services Developer Pack tutorial or Java EE 5 tutorial. Both of them contain the same information that I am reproducing below:
Comparing Cursor and Iterator APIs
Before choosing between the cursor and
iterator APIs, you should note a few
things that you can do with the
iterator API that you cannot do with
cursor API:
Objects created from the XMLEvent subclasses are immutable, and can be
used in arrays, lists, and maps, and
can be passed through your
applications even after the parser has
moved on to subsequent events.
You can create subtypes of XMLEvent that are either completely
new information items or extensions of
existing items but with additional
methods.
You can add and remove events from an XML event stream in much simpler
ways than with the cursor API.
Similarly, keep some general
recommendations in mind when making
your choice:
If you are programming for a particularly memory-constrained
environment, like J2ME, you can make
smaller, more efficient code with the
cursor API.
If performance is your highest priority--for example, when creating
low-level libraries or
infrastructure--the cursor API is more
efficient.
If you want to create XML processing pipelines, use the iterator
API.
If you want to modify the event stream, use the iterator API.
If you want to your application to be able to handle pluggable processing
of the event stream, use the iterator
API.
In general, if you do not have a strong preference one way or the
other, using the iterator API is
recommended because it is more
flexible and extensible, thereby
"future-proofing" your applications.
The iterator API although recommended is slower than the cursor API, as the cursor does not need to remember the previous nodes that it had parsed; it provides forward-only parsing of XML documents and does not have the overhead of construction of XMLEvent objects. Apparently, a benchmark has indicated that SAX might turn out to be better at parsing large documents compared to StAX; you might want to verify if you can reproduce the results of the benchmark for your data-sets.