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Fatigue in the weights room is one of the least studied areas in exercise science. The research models we draw on were built almost entirely on endurance athletes - and what governs performance during heavy lifting may be a different question altogether.
Professor Alan St. Clair Gibson is a medical doctor and one of the world's leading authorities on fatigue in sport and exercise, and a key architect of the Central Governor Model of fatigue that is now widely accepted and taught in exercise science.
In this episode, you will learn:
Why fatigue is classified as a complex emotion, not a purely physical event
How the brain reduces motor unit recruitment as a protective mechanism before the muscles have actually failed
Why pain and fear may be larger regulators than fatigue itself during heavy lifting
How the I voice and the me voice compete during exercise - and what shapes each one
What the Integrative Governor Model adds to the Central Governor
What a 1962 study reveals about the reserve the brain withholds under normal conditions
Key insight
The brain reduces motor unit recruitment before the muscles are genuinely exhausted. Understanding what sets that threshold - and what can shift it - is one of the more consequential and least explored questions in strength and conditioning.
Resources & Links:
Professor Alan St. Clair Gibson - https://www.abdn.ac.uk/people/a.gibson
The Integrative Governor Model (2018) - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28478704/
Dr. Tony Boutagy - https://tonyboutagy.com/
Follow on Instagram - @tonyboutagy
Listen on Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5Yydg6y3dA8OiA8hyHcJON
By Dr Tony Boutagy4.9
1111 ratings
Fatigue in the weights room is one of the least studied areas in exercise science. The research models we draw on were built almost entirely on endurance athletes - and what governs performance during heavy lifting may be a different question altogether.
Professor Alan St. Clair Gibson is a medical doctor and one of the world's leading authorities on fatigue in sport and exercise, and a key architect of the Central Governor Model of fatigue that is now widely accepted and taught in exercise science.
In this episode, you will learn:
Why fatigue is classified as a complex emotion, not a purely physical event
How the brain reduces motor unit recruitment as a protective mechanism before the muscles have actually failed
Why pain and fear may be larger regulators than fatigue itself during heavy lifting
How the I voice and the me voice compete during exercise - and what shapes each one
What the Integrative Governor Model adds to the Central Governor
What a 1962 study reveals about the reserve the brain withholds under normal conditions
Key insight
The brain reduces motor unit recruitment before the muscles are genuinely exhausted. Understanding what sets that threshold - and what can shift it - is one of the more consequential and least explored questions in strength and conditioning.
Resources & Links:
Professor Alan St. Clair Gibson - https://www.abdn.ac.uk/people/a.gibson
The Integrative Governor Model (2018) - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28478704/
Dr. Tony Boutagy - https://tonyboutagy.com/
Follow on Instagram - @tonyboutagy
Listen on Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5Yydg6y3dA8OiA8hyHcJON

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