quantitative
Analysis v1
Strong Support
Some trainers count all your lifts to measure workout effort, but this new method gives half credit to exercises that don’t directly work your main muscles—like warm-ups—and it turns out this way predicts muscle growth and strength gains better than the old ways.
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Evidence from Studies
Supporting (1)
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Community contributions welcome
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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.
Systematic Review With Meta-Analysis
Human
2026 FebThis study found that counting only half the points for exercises that don’t directly target the muscle (like doing squats to build legs) gives the best predictions for muscle growth and strength—better than counting all exercises or only the direct ones.
Contradicting (0)
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Community contributions welcome
No contradicting evidence found
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.