Using absolute paths forces the web server to establish a connection, send and receive the HTTP requests. If using relative, the connection is already established, so it doesn't have to go through that logic (hence increasing page load speed). You probably won't see an amazing difference, but every bit saved is a good thing, right?
Edit: After doing a quick test, the difference is extremely negligible, and doesn't seem to produce that great of a case for my answer. I created a test page with the same image twice, one with relative and one with absolute path: http://damonbauer.me/test/index.html.
Test One: Image w/ Absolute path in HTML code first: (click for larger version)
http://damonbauer.me/test/images/results1.jpg
The absolute path image took 869ms to load, while the relative path image, listed second in the HTML code, loaded in 635ms.
Test Two: Image w/ Relative path in HTML code first: (click for larger version)
http://damonbauer.me/test/images/results1.jpg
The absolute path image took 303ms to load, while the relative path image, listed first in the HTML code, loaded in 315ms.
My opinion? It's faster to load using relative. Even when listed after the absolute path image, it took only 12ms longer for the relative image to load. When the absolute path image was loaded second, it took it 234ms longer to load. In both cases, they are close, and it looks to me like it matters more about what loads first. Either way, I would go with relative, if only for portability's sake.