A contrast index of 0.55 has always been "standard". It works for me under Rocky Mountain lighting. A CI of 0.65 works better under cloudy (typically European) lighting. If you read the tech sheets, Foma's reliably optimistic ASA ratings are for a CI of 0.6 to 0.7. A difference of 0.02, like between 0.56 and 0.58, is immaterial.
But what you really want to do is go out, shoot a bunch of pictures, print them in the darkroom, and use the ASA and development times that work for you. A CI of 0.5 to 0.55 works for me, except under cloudy skies when 0.6-0.65 works better. But I did those measurements after the fact, and arrived at the development times by experimenting.
The only exception - when I lived in Arcata, on those pea soup foggy summer days at the beach, a CI of 0.8 worked well. Under the redwoods, forget it. The contrast range there, between deep shadows and new green foliage, is much higher than it appears to the eye. I'm sure Vaughn has experienced that.