Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Practice will make you better, if not perfect

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Jul, 2014 11:29 AM
    Practice will not make you perfect but it will usually make you better at what you are practicing, a promising study shows.
     
    Also, while practice will not make perfect all people, it will make almost everyone better.
     
    "Why do so few people who are involved in sports such as golf, musical instruments such as the violin or careers such as law or medicine ever reach an expert level of performance?" asked Fred Oswald, a professor and chair of psychology at Rice University.
     
    This question is the subject of a long-running debate in psychology.
     
    To decipher this, researchers reviewed 88 previous studies with over 11,135 participants that investigated relevant research on practice predicating performance in music, games, sports, educational and occupational domains.
     
    Within each domain, researchers averaged the reported results across all relevant studies.
     
    They found that "deliberate practice" - defined as engagement in structured activities created specifically to improve performance in a specific field - explained 26 percent of the variance in performance for games, 21 percent for music, 18 percent for sports, four percent for education and less than one percent for professions.
     
    "Deliberate practice was a strong overall predicator of success in many performance domains, and not surprisingly, people who report practicing a lot generally tend to perform at a higher level than people who practice less," Oswald maintained.
     
    However, no matter how strongly practice predicated performance in our findings, there was always statistical room for other personal factors, including basic abilities, to predict learning a skill and performing successfully, he noted.
     
    "Other factors matter as well, but even so, no one says that practice will ever hurt you; but be careful if you are walking tightropes," Oswald concluded.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study

    Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study
    Planning to start a family? Stop using marijuana now as cannabis use may put your fertility at risk, especially if you are young.

    Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study

    Divorce may end in obese kids!

    Divorce may end in obese kids!
    Children, whose parents are divorced or not married but living together, are at a higher risk of obesity, a study has found.

    Divorce may end in obese kids!

    Bees create mental maps to reach home

    Bees create mental maps to reach home
    We have long wondered at the complex navigation abilities of the bees who use the sun as a compass. But bees do memorise a mental map too, like humans, despite their much smaller brain size, new research reveals adding a whole new dimension to complex bee-navigation abilities that have long fascinated scientists.

    Bees create mental maps to reach home

    Car buyers ready to give up sex than haggle over prices: Study

    Car buyers ready to give up sex than haggle over prices: Study
    What has purchasing a car and sex in common? Well, give your wavering thoughts a rest here as some Americans feel that it is better to give up sex than haggle over the price of a car!

    Car buyers ready to give up sex than haggle over prices: Study

    Night owls run great risk of becoming couch potatoes

    Night owls run great risk of becoming couch potatoes
    Do you stay up late at night busy surfing internet or chatting on your smart phone and wake up only when morning turns into noon?

    Night owls run great risk of becoming couch potatoes

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.
    Apart from late-night parties, good night's sleep and some real action, the time between midnight to 4 a.m. is also known for another thing - suicide.

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.