
Here's the long aswer as far as I understand it.....I've got a single skin brick building with a tin roof. The tin roof is obviously very light on in the mass department, and nigh impossible to hermetically seal. So the theory is to put a 'middle leaf' on the bottem chord of the trusses, mounted on resilient mounts, and seal this against the brick work which will create my air-tight shell.
The GG is going in between the two layers of 16mm drywall for the middle leaf to try and give it the highest trasmission loss as possible without having to hang more than two layers of drywall, which would put a lot of extra weight on the truss assembly. I'm not exactly sure how it compares with a brickwall in TL terms, but i'm hoping it's at least close.
If I were to use GG on the ceiling for the internal rooms (two layers 16mm also) I would also have to use it on all the walls (two layers 16mm) to make the whole internal structure perform to the same level. That's a whole heap more GG (around 3 times as much).
The short answer.....Beefing up the middle leaf with GG is an attempt to compensate for not having built a heavy enough roof to start with

Stuart might have a more straight forward way of describing this concept, but I hope I've made some sense.