The old Kodak b&w darkroom dataguide (I just got my 1977 edition a week or so ago) has great information about adjusting developer recommended times. There are factors for if you are processing in a small tank, large tank, if the film is a short or long toe, to account for the amount of flare that was in the imaging system taking the shot, and the number of stops of contrast that the lit scene had.
These adjustment factirs feed into a dial calculator, that is worth its weight in gold, in terms of being useful to me. I have for a long time had the 1984 combined dataguide version, and actually bought a second dataguide in case the development dial was ever lost or damaged beyond repair. The dataguide recommends a starting development number, and the dil, then presents the time temperature combintaions that match that development number.
I last weekend shot a series of head shots for an upcoming theatre production on plus X, and used a lens hood, and knew that the lighting ranged between f/8 and f2/8 (ie 4 stops) on the set that I lit between the forehead closest the soft box and the backdrop. I developed in d76 1:1, which had a DN recommended of 36.5. The adjusting factors tabulated to an addition of 3 DN's, which I think about and extra 30%. I warmed the chems to give development time around 8 minutes to match the adjusted development number. The negs came out beautifully developed and printed very easily on a nuber 2 contrast grade of paper.