Quote:
Originally Posted by XiL3
Wait a second I just realized somethng that makes me not believe this stuff so much. They said Pectoralis Minor and used all incline movements, that's an underlying muscle, do they mean the clavicular head of the pectoralis major? The minor is well...minor.
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They may actually mean minor, as it stabilizes the humerus during presses. But it's literally a deep muscle. It helps downward rotation of the scapula when you raise your hand over shoulder level. So I don't know why they'd do an EMG on pec minor.
I thought the same thing.
I think they may mean the sternocostal head of pec major. You might be surprised that the real legit scientists will do the numbers, and then some pinhead will organize it and say "sternocostal head? the bottom one? That's a fancy way to say pec minor"
XD