Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Research Review: Greg Nuckols on the “Mind Muscle Connection” and Muscle Building
Episode Date: March 21, 2018In this episode, I speak with Greg Nuckols who’s a world-record holding powerlifter, researcher, and coach, and one of foremost authorities on the science of strength training. Greg also produces a ...fantastic monthly research review along with Dr. Eric Helms and Dr. Mike Zourdos, called MASS (www.strongerbyscience.com/mass), and in this interview, Greg is going to break down one of the studies analyzed in their review. The study he’s going to discuss looked at what many people call the “mind-muscle connection” and how it relates to muscle and strength gain. In this discussion, Greg explains what the mind-muscle connection is, what this study has to say about it and how that squares with the rest of the literature, how you might incorporate into your training and what to expect from it, and more. 4:30 - What are cues and the mind and muscle connection? 11:43 - What’s the value of cues if you’re already lifting at a high RPE? 19:09 - What are your thoughts on how external cues help muscle growth? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, hey, Mike here back with another episode of the Muscle for Life podcast.
And this time I am speaking with the one and only Greg Knuckles, who is a world record holding powerlifter, researcher, and coach, and one of the foremost authorities on the science of strength training.
His website, www.strongerbyscience.com, is one of the best resources for the hardcore science of weightlifting.
resources for the hardcore science of weightlifting. It's not particularly for laymen,
but if you really like to geek out on all of the technical stuff, you will really like Greg's work.
And Greg also produces a fantastic monthly research review along with Dr. Eric Helms and Dr. Mike Zordos, both of whom have been on my show to talk about the science of making gains. And that research review is called Mass,
M-A-S-S. And you can learn about that at strongerbyscience.com slash mass, M-A-S-S.
Now in this interview, Greg is going to break down one of the studies analyzed in that review.
And this study looked at what many people call the mind muscle connection. And this study looked at what many people call the mind-muscle connection. And this study looked at
how it relates to muscle and strength gain. And Greg is going to break it down. He's going to
explain what the mind-muscle connection is, what this particular study had to say about it, and
how that squares with the rest of the literature, how you might incorporate the mind-muscle connection in your
training and what to expect from it, as well as what not to expect from it, and more.
This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills,
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You either love my stuff
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And if for whatever reason, they're just not for you, contact us and we will give you a full refund on the spot.
All righty. That is enough shameless plugging for now, at least. Let's get to the show.
Greg, welcome back. The last time you were on, we were talking about strength,
the correlation between strength and size. That one was really popular. People really
like that. It still gets a lot of listens now, today. I keep an eye on it because it just
keeps going. Sweet. Glad people like it. Very cool. Yeah. So this is going to be a research
review. I'm excited to have you on. I've had Eric on, I've had Mike on. So now complete the Troika,
the trifecta. What are we going about today? We're talking about mind muscle connection
and how cueing relates to that. And I'm going to kind of just allow you to start and explain to
everybody listening, what is the mind muscle connection or what is it purported to be?
What is cueing? And then let's get into the study that you reviewed in your monthly research review
and what can we learn from it? Yeah, absolutely.
So mind muscle connection is basically the idea that when you're performing an exercise,
if you specifically focus on trying to use whatever muscle you're trying to build with
that exercise, that you'll be able to use that muscle more, activate it more.
And hopefully, theoretically, that will lead to more muscle growth.
In the research, generally, mind-muscle connection type stuff is researched via cueing.
So there's two broad categories of cues.
Those are internal and external cues.
And internal cues are more like mind-muscle connection type cues. And internal cues are more like mind muscle connection type cues. So if someone
is performing the bench press, you tell them like squeeze your pecs, something like that.
Whereas external cues are less focused on your muscles or what parts of your body you're doing,
and more focused on the outcome of the movement itself. So also for bench press, you could say like drive yourself
into the bench or try to throw the bar through the ceiling, something like that. In most of the
research to this point, they find that internal cues across like a broad variety of exercises,
including things outside of the gym. So even stuff like throwing darts, tossing beanbags,
outside of the gym. So even stuff like throwing darts, tossing beanbags. Internal cues tend to increase muscle activation as assessed by EMG. EMG stands for electromyography. Essentially,
you just have sensors attached to the skin over the muscle that pick up on the electrical activity
in the muscle. And for muscle fibers to be activated, they're stimulated by a motor nerve, and you can
pick that up as an electrical signal. So that's what they're doing there. So internal cues tend
to increase muscle activation, but they tend to decrease performance, at least relative to external
cues or no cues. That could be decreasing accuracy for some sort of like accuracy task, or it could mean decreased weight lifted or moving
weight at a slower speed, for example. External cues, on the other hand, they tend to increase
performance, again, whether that be like accuracy type stuff, or whether that be bar speed, weight
lifted. But a lot of the research up to this point has showed lower EMG, lower muscle activation,
when compared to internal cues.
The problem with a fair amount of the research up to this point is when they're comparing
internal and external cues, so cues focused on performance versus more like mind-muscle
connection, a fair amount of the studies have either used like isometric or
isokinetic exercises, which essentially involve big fancy machines where either you're just
pushing against immovable objects that would be isometric or isokinetic, the speed of the
exercise is fixed. So for knee extension, it could be fixed at like 60 degrees of knee extension per second or something like that, which obviously isn't how most exercises in the gym are performed.
So there will be parts of the movement where you can move the weight faster, parts where you can move the weight slower just based on your natural strength curve.
So, yeah, the exercises in the study protocols have been kind of contrived in a fair amount of that research up to this point.
So the study I reviewed in mass I thought was really neat and really applicable because it kind of examined these two different types of cues in more of a real world setting.
So the title of the study was Influence of Different Intentional Focus on EMG Amplitude and Contraction bench press at different speeds. So essentially, what they did in this study is they had people bench press 50%
one rep max with six different conditions. So for three of them, they were intentionally lifting
with a controlled rep cadence, I think it was like two second rep, which is a pretty slow
rep at 50% one rep max, especially. So for three of them, they lifted controlled for three of them,
they lifted explosively. And then for each of those two groups of three, for one of the trials,
they told them just push the bar the way you typically would. For one of them, they said,
really focus on your pecs while you're doing this. That would be an internal cue, trying to get some pec mind muscle connection. For one of them,
they said, really focus on your triceps when you're doing this. So really try to get like
tricep mind muscle connection in the bench press. Six total conditions, two, like no cueing,
two pec focused cueing, two tricep focused cueing, and then for each of those sets of cues or lack
of cues, one explosive trial and one controlled lifting trial. And so what they found in this
study is that when the people were lifting at a slow rep cadence, the pec-focused cueing and the
tricep-focused cueing were effective at increasing pec and tricep EMG
the way they'd expect to. So when comparing pec focused cueing to no cueing with a controlled
rep cadence, pec EMG increased, tricep EMG was unchanged. And with tricep focused cueing,
interestingly, both tricep and pec EMG increased relative to
the control condition. So that's pretty cool. And that would seem to back up a lot of the research
in the area up to this point that, you know, internal cueing focusing on the mind muscle
connection can increase muscle activation. But then the interesting thing is the trials where
they lifted explosively. And with explosive lifting, muscle activation is going to be higher regardless because you're outputting more force.
And to create more force, you need to recruit more motor units.
And that is going to mean like higher EMG, higher muscle activation.
So they found that muscle activation for explosive lifting was higher than that for controlled lifting, regardless of the cues given.
And with explosive lifting, internal focus, so focusing on pec or tricep mind muscle connection, didn't actually increase EMG anymore.
So I think kind of the two things to take away from this is that if you are kind of lifting slow and controlled,
even with weights, you could lift much more explosively.
Really focusing on the mind muscle connection very well could increase muscle activation,
which is pretty cool, which then theoretically would lead to more hypertrophy. Although that's still somewhat tentative.
Although there is, I've heard a study coming out soon from Dr. Brad
Schoenfeld kind of validating that concept, which is pretty neat because that's been a pretty big
gap in the literature for a long time. It might be a silly question, but I'm just going to ask it.
What's the practical value of that though, if you are, let's say, lifting at a high RPE where
you're going to have a lot of muscle fiber recruitment regardless? I mean,
if you're pushing yourself, let's say you're lifting heavy-ish weights, high RPE, do you
think you'd really make a difference? Man, that's a good question. I'll need to wait to see that
study come out to really look at the methods and see how they set things up. Because yeah,
if they weren't pushing them to failure, then that would make sense. If you're focusing on activating a particular muscle and still staying shy of failure, then, you know, you'd have one group with reasonably high muscle activation the whole time.
One group with somewhat lower muscle activation that wouldn't creep up as they approached failure.
That will be like a very key component of that study, like seeing whether they were taking them to failure or not. Right. Because practically speaking, then if people listening, if it's like, well,
you could just take 50% then, and you could work in a low RPE. So, you're leaving a lot of reps in
the tank. But if you really focus on the mind muscle connection, like I just see the PDF pushers,
this is going to be the next thing. Not that that's the fault of Brad or you or anybody else,
but just people listening to understand the practicality of that. That's the question of, of Brad or you or anybody else, but just people listening to understand the
practicality of that. That's the question is if you're lifting correctly, a lot of your work is
going to be done with heavier weights, higher PE, meaning you're going to be ending probably most
of your sets with one or two reps left in the tank. And when you do that and correct me if I'm
wrong here, Greg, but you're, you're going to be probably recruiting maximal, uh, muscle fiber
just through that alone. Uh, no, I, I very much agree with that. So, um, this may be going somewhat
into the weeds, but the relationship between motor unit recruitment and hypertrophy is
actually still unknown, which, which is something that I don't think most people are aware of. Like,
so, so people kind of assume that you're lifting weights, you recruit muscle fibers,
and that stimulates them, and then they grow, and everything's nice. Like, I think that's the model
people kind of have in mind. But kind of logically, there has to be some sort of fatigue component to it as well.
And the reason I say that is that so when you look at research on strength training,
you see hypertrophy of both type one and type two muscle fibers, which if all that mattered was just
recruiting muscle fibers for them to grow, You wouldn't expect resistance training to really do anything for type one muscle fibers because anytime you're moving around
throughout the day, like your lowest threshold motor units are being recruited to do that.
And just so people are seeing type one is the slow twitch. It's the more endurance muscle,
whereas type two is the fast switch, the muscle that can generate a lot of force and generate a
lot of power. And that's the muscle that we are building when we are in the gym lifting weights, really.
Well, you're, you're building both.
Well, I guess then I'd say that the muscle fiber types just serve different functions
primarily then I guess.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, so, so for anything you do in the gym, well, for anything you do period,
your nervous system kind of looks to see how much force you're trying to produce.
And then it always starts by
recruiting your lowest threshold motor units, which are your smallest, weakest type one fibers.
And then as you need more and more muscle mass to perform whatever activity you're performing,
it progressively recruits more motor units in an orderly fashion, such that your highest threshold
type two strongest muscle fibers are
the ones that are recruited last. So yeah, where I was going with that is like, obviously, there
has to be some sort of fatigue component as well. Because let's say you're just walking around
throughout the day, your traps are always at least a little bit activated just to kind of hold your
scapula in place. But people notice when they go to the gym
and they start deadlifting, doing shrugs,
their traps grow.
And their type two fibers grow more,
but their type one fibers do still grow from doing that.
And if it was just purely a matter
of the muscle being activated,
it wouldn't matter if you were just going around
in day-to-day living versus lifting
for your type one fibers.
Yeah, I would have huge calves.
Yeah, because they're being used all the time.
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You can find me on Instagram at MuscleForLifeFitness,
Twitter at MuscleFor for life and facebook at muscle
for life fitness going back to your question of aren't you recruiting everything or pretty much
everything if you're taking a set close to failure in the first place i'd say yes but since there
probably does have to be some sort of fatigue component for hypertrophy as well,
if you're recruiting more muscle fibers at the very beginning of a set and keeping them active
for a greater proportion of the set, theoretically, even though you would still end up recruiting
those same muscle fibers at some point on your path to failure of that set, them being active for a greater proportion of the time
may still end up being beneficial for hypertrophy, even if you would have recruited them otherwise,
but they wouldn't have stayed recruited for quite as long.
Sure. That makes sense.
It's really interesting because people are very, very confident when they discuss things online
about the relationship of recruiting muscle
fibers versus those fibers then growing subsequent to training. But that's still like an entirely
open question in physiology. Like it's very, very, very difficult to study. Like you could
study it with like isolated muscle fibers, like in a petri dish in the lab. But in terms of being
able to know like exactly which motor units are being
recruited, like in a living human being, like that's pretty impossible. There are some really
interesting approaches that people are taking to try to do that, which are incredibly like math
heavy and involve putting a lot more sensors on the muscle and then trying to decompose the EMG
signal to isolate different motor units. But yeah, that's that's still like a wide open question. So
we can use EMG to kind of tell you the general amount of muscle activation taking place early
in a set. But yeah, the relationship between that and hypertrophy, like I said, the very first study
on that is soon to be published. So it's still a pretty wide open question.
So as far as takeaways go, if you're kind of like tallying the evidence for internal versus
external cueing, there's very good evidence that external cueing is better for acute performance.
So if you're going for a one rep max bench press, you should be
thinking throw that bar through the ceiling, you shouldn't be thinking, squeeze my pecs really hard.
And in terms of long term training outcomes, not directly for strength training, but for
for some other outcomes, there is some evidence showing like long term benefits to external
cueing as well. In terms of muscle growth, I would say this type of stuff provides
weak evidence that internal cueing may be better for hypertrophy.
What are your thoughts on like how the external cues though might be able to help you progress
better just in terms of overload, adding more weight to the bar, gaining reps,
and what that turns into in terms of muscle growth?
reps and what that turns into in terms of muscle growth?
Man, it's hard to say.
So I think that increasing strength in a moderate rep range, like if your 10 rep maxes are going up, I think that's a decent proxy for hypertrophy.
But at the same time, you kind of have to ask like how that is coming about.
So if you're mostly getting that just from motor patterns getting better, and maybe not necessarily from
hypertrophy, which very well could be happening with external
cues, then it might end up being not quite as good of a proxy
measure. And also like just kind of the relationship between
strength gains and hypertrophy. There's quite a bit of research
at this point showing that you can get pretty similar
hypertrophy with like higher load and lower load training, but strength gains are almost unanimously larger with
with higher load training, like there can be a disconnect there as well. So acute performance
and maybe performance increases might be a little bit lower with internal queuing. But that wouldn't
necessarily also mean that muscle growth was lower with
internal cueing. Sure. Yeah, sure. I mean, for what it's worth, I've always preferred
external cues for the big lifts, just because especially if I'm going heavy, I just have felt
that it helps me not only lift more weight, but maintain proper form. And I've written about the
mind, some of this stuff, you know, I don't know, it was like a year ago. It wasn't necessarily as in-depth as everything you're going into now, but just a real simple
explanation. And I've found that with accessory exercises, at least it's a little bit easier to
use internal cueing. And so that's what I've done personally.
No, I agree. I think that's a pretty smart way to go about it. Like focus on performance with
your big lifts and then like no one cares
what your one rep max biceps. Exactly. You don't really need to be focused on performance for that.
Just, just focus on activating the muscle. Yeah. And you're not even, you don't really even care.
You're just like, I don't know, hopefully it goes up. I mean, it should go up over time, I guess,
but really you're just like, my biceps are small, they need volume. So I just need to do some extra
work for them. Great. Well, that makes sense. Anything else that you want to mention regarding this study or
mind muscle or cues or anything, any other points that you think are worth covering before we wrap
up? One of the big findings that I didn't quite get around to because we pursued another thread
of conversation is that even though internal cueing led to higher EMG at the controlled speed, it didn't actually affect
muscle activation at all with explosive lifting. And the other thing was with explosive lifting,
muscle activation was higher than with controlled lifting, regardless of cueing. So
pec focused cueing with controlled lifting did increase relative to no cueing with
controlled lifting, but like no cueing with explosive lifting still led to higher peck
activation than focusing on your pecks with controlled lifting.
And would you say the explosive lifting is a bit closer to the bar speed you'd expect
from the actual practical type of, again, heavier,
heavy-ish higher RPE. Because in that case, of course, then it probably would be even technically
better to focus on the external cues when you're going to be lifting explosively in any way. So
the internal cueing may not even help in that situation anyway.
Yeah, I'd agree with that. And that's broadly in line with another
study published like in 2009, I believe, set up a similar way, but comparing instead of controlled
cadence at 50% to explosive cadence at 50%, it was comparing 50% versus 80% one rep max.
And it found pretty similar things that internal cues did increase muscle activation
when benching 50% loads, but the impact they had at 80% was much, much smaller. So basically once
you get enough weight on the bar that you are like actually having to push yourself, like regardless
of what sorts of cues you're using, muscle activation tends to be pretty similar between
the cueing conditions regardless. Makes sense. So people listening that's an easy takeaway of external cues are
probably better for increasing performance on your big lifts and then if you want to focus on you
know really squeezing your bicep when you're doing bicep curls yeah that makes sense you're not you're
not trying to necessarily curl up that dumbbell so explosively as you are trying to lift 400 pounds
off the floor or whatever so yep i Yep. I think that does it.
Awesome.
People that are listening that like this type of discussion, I'm just going to say, I highly
recommend you check out Greg's monthly research review, Mass Monthly Applications in Strength
Sport.
Did I get the acronym correct?
Yes, sir.
Most people say sports.
Yeah.
No, I remember.
I remembered singular.
So for some reason, my brain is weird like that.
Sometimes little nonsensical details just stick forever. I don't know.
And then sometimes I can't remember someone's name after they meet them and they say,
hey, I'm blah. And then two seconds later, I'm like, wait a minute, who are you?
No, but where can people find Mass?
StrongerbyScience.com slash Mass.
Great. And also, anybody anyway, listening, I highly recommend
check out Greg's articles that he puts up on stronger by science. Some of the best in-depth
stuff out there on mostly training. That's obviously your forte in terms of what you like,
what you work on the most, it seems right. And yeah, fantastic stuff. I wish I knew as much as
Greg knows about weightlifting, but I never will. So instead I'm just, I yeah, fantastic stuff. I wish I knew as much as Greg knows about weightlifting,
but I never will. So instead, I'm just I just read his stuff.
I appreciate it, Mike.
Absolutely. Yeah. So everybody listening, check out mass. I think Greg,
do you have an offer going where like people get a free issue that they can check out or?
Yeah. So if you go to stronger by science.com slash mass dash issue dash one, there's a free,
a free issue that you can download to check it out before pulling the trigger and joining
the cool kids.
Sounds good.
Thanks again for doing this, Greg.
I appreciate it.
Thanks, Mike.
Hey there, it is Mike again.
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though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in,
so instead I'm going to just quickly tell you about something of mine. Specifically,
my high quality sports multivitamin Triumph. Now, Triumph was designed for athletes and
physically active people who want to optimize their health and fight off stress, fatigue,
and overtraining. It contains 21 vitamins and
minerals, as well as 14 additional ingredients that improve overall health and wellbeing,
enhance physical and mental performance, and help protect against disease. All that is why
Triumph has over 500 reviews on Amazon with a four and a half star average and another 180 plus on my website with
a five star average. So if you want to plug any nutritional holes in your diet, improve your mood
and mental and physical performance and boost your resistance to stress, sickness, and disease,
then you want to head over to www.legionathletics.com and pick up a bottle of Triumph today.
And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps,
use the coupon code podcast to check out
and you will save 10% on your entire order.
And lastly, you should also know
that I have a very simple 100% money back guarantee
that works like this.
You either love my stuff or you get
your money back, period. You don't have to return the products. You don't have to fill out forms.
You don't have to jump through any other hoops or go through any other shenanigans.
So you really can't lose here. Head over to www.lesionathletics.com now, place your order,
and see for yourself why my supplements have
thousands of rave reviews all over the internet. And if for whatever reason,
they're just not for you, contact us and we will give you a full refund on the spot.