To really know how much each muscle is being worked during the week, we should count exercise volume based on how much each move actually hits that muscle — not just how many sets and reps you do.
Evidence from Studies
Supporting (2)
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The Resistance Training Dose Response: Meta-Regressions Exploring the Effects of Weekly Volume and Frequency on Muscle Hypertrophy and Strength Gains.
The study found that counting sets based on how much they work a specific muscle (like giving partial credit for indirect exercises) works better than counting all sets the same. This matches the idea in the claim.
Reconsidering Exercise Selection with EMG: Poor Agreement between Ranking Hip Exercises with Gluteal EMG and Muscle Force.
The study shows that how hard a muscle works during an exercise isn’t always reflected by standard activation measurements, so we need better ways to measure workout impact—like the method the claim suggests.
Contradicting (0)
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Gold Standard Evidence Needed
According to GRADE and EBM methodology, here is what ideal scientific evidence would look like to definitively prove or disprove this specific claim, ordered from strongest to weakest evidence.