Interesting question. Many will tell you yes. I say not to. I do believe that the entire idea of defoliation will be debunked if anyone ever does a properly designed side by side study in a double blind test.
IMHO pruning should be done minimally only to increase air circulation and to rid the plant of some of the first few branches that will grow long but produce little worthwhile flowers, unless one is growing outside with space all around the plant -- then I would not even prune these. Many people seem to think that plate leaves become a negative as far as bud production is concerned, as they get older. I do not hold this view.
See this article for botanical logic.
https://www.cocoforcannabis.com/community/photons_corner/to-defoliate-or-not-to-defoliate/
The article is pretty clear about how the rationalizations that people come up with about why pruning is good for bud production are incorrect. The sole objective of a female plant is to produce as many seeds as possible. The plant knows what it is doing, (well not really but natural selection over millions of years has made it the equivalent of a genius at optimizing its reactions and structure.) The long and short of it is that plate leave send growth energy to the flowers at a higher rate than other smaller leaves, and when their efficiency drops off to the point were they become a drag on flower production, the plant sucks nutrition from them and they dry up and die. Though if you have leaves that have light burn, they will become very inefficient but still not fall off. Possibly because in nature this is not a possibility so no adaptation has ever occurred. So if I had leaves that were clearly burned by light and had turned yellow and brown but continued to hold on strong, as real light burned leaves do, I would prune them off -- IF they were shading other more viable leaves.
IMHO pruning is a tool that should be minimized as much as possible.