ETA:
Minimum Allowable Live Loads for Use in Design of Buildings, Report of the Building Code Committee, Bureau of Standards, November 1, 1925
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Live Loads on Floors in Buildings, U.S. Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards, Building Materials and Structures Report 133, December 19, 1952.
Live-Load Survey Results for Office Buildings, Culver, Journal of the Structural Division (of ASCE) Dec 1976. << - that one I don't have, so if anybody has it it'd be appreciated.
Not that I've done a detailed study, but having used them for a fair while, I haven't noticed any dramatic changes in live loads in the last forty years. The one I recall was a fair bit of discussion on parking garage live loading during the merger into the 2000 International Building Code, and the popularity of Hummers sparking some debate as to the adequacy of those loads. The other item is the alignment between partition loads between the code and ASCE 7, and similarly, the differences between balcony live loads between IBC and ASCE 7 that existed for a while. I don't recall specific timeframes for these items but circa 2000-2010.
Regarding weight increases in the general population, I'd be far more concerned about the point loads on roofs not keeping pace with the amount of equipment the average firefighter carries when they step onto the roof of a burning building to vent it. Humans are roughly the same density as water, so as weight increases, so does diameter and you can only pack so many circles into a rectangular or square area. Elevators would be the one area where weight increases might be worthy of consideration, but they tend to have actual weight limits, not just practical limits on how many people will fit into the car. (
This reminds me of a Gabriel Iglesias comedy routine).
Survey Results for Fire Loads and Live Loads in Office Buildings, U.S. Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards, NBS Building Science Series, #85, May 1976.
Floor live loads for office buildings, Andam, Building and Environment, 1986. This one also provides 14 references, some may overlap with what's already provided here.