Your ability to perceive weight on the bar, changes in weight, and degree of difficulty wrt its affect on bar speed is essentially shit, and it doesn't improve with experience. This is why "RPE" is a marketing scam.
Hello.
Recently, I unintentionally under-loaded the bar for my squat work sets. I then performed my first two work sets, thinking and feeling like I was achieving my scheduled progress. Then saw that I was underweight. After correcting for the third set, I could perceive no difference, and this made me curious to know if anyone tried to quantify a trainee’s conscious ability to gauge mass on the bar for any of the prescribed lifts. So, I worked out some questions:
1. How accurately can an advanced trainee guess at the load, if we assume they are able to set up ‘blind’ to the load and then perform 1 set of 1 rep? (e.g., trainee: “I perceived the load to be 320lbs., but it was actually 300lbs., so I can ‘tell’ the mass to within 7% ”)
2. What is the minimum change-in-mass they would be able to perceive/resolve, if they are ‘blind’ to the initial load, blind to the change, and performs 1 set of 1 rep at each load? (i.e., trainee: “I perceive/did not perceive a change-in-load, between sets”)
3. How precisely can they guess at blind changes in load in terms of multiples of the minimal perceptible change-in-mass? (e.g., trainee: “I perceive that the load was changed by 3 multiples of the minimal perceptible change-in-mass”)
4. How accurately can they guess at absolute changes in load, ‘blind’ to both initial and changed loads? (e.g., trainee: “I perceive that the initial load was changed by 30lbs.”)
Thanks in advance to anyone who might reply.
Your ability to perceive weight on the bar, changes in weight, and degree of difficulty wrt its affect on bar speed is essentially shit, and it doesn't improve with experience. This is why "RPE" is a marketing scam.
This varies workout to workout as well, presumably due to a combination of hundreds physiological, cognitive, emotional factors, and so on. Sometimes you feel full of energy and the weights feel light. Sometimes the weights feel crushingly heavy and you feel weak and uncoordinated, but somehow the fifth rep goes up even though it felt awful.
The same thing happens on the rowing machine, which gives you precise data on how much force you're generating. You can do an awful sprint workout on Wednesday, during which you feel so out of breath, nauseous and in so much pain that you think you must have embarrassed yourself, only to find out that you actually went faster than in the same workout you did on Monday.
I'll have to write an article about it.
Vince, do you disagree with the observation?