The old adage that practice makes perfect may very well be true, according to neuroscientists. Researchers found when a male zebra finch is in the presence of an attractive female and delivers its rehearsed mating call, a noradrenaline release in the basal ganglia shuts down variability in song and makes the call as perfect as it can be.
Both intelligence and practice positively affect the acquisition and retention of stress skills.
Repeated, extensive practice can be replaced by brief memory reactivation to help boost learning, a new study reports.