Originally Posted by
OITW
For the average human, a hot item pressed against the skin had to be X% hotter before a human could perceive a difference, or a needle had to be pressed X% harder. This was in a psych department dominated by behaviorists. I forget the name of the scale, and avoid psychologists, but perhaps Dr Kilgore is familiar with it. It would seem to suggest that there is a certain point where microloading would no longer work, where the % of increase is too small to incur an adaptive response. Unlike the end of the novice phase, where the lifter can't move the weight, this would imply that a lifter can increase a load so incrementally that it produces no effective adaptation stimulus.