“…Based on extensive neurobiological evidence (Keck, Hübener, et al, 2017; Kukushkin & Carew, 2017; Lee & Kirkwood, 2019; Smolen et al, 2016), one interpretation of the results from Hamel et al (2021) is that interference arises because the same neural networks—or largely overlapping ones—are recruited twice by the two identical learning sessions. Specifically, through the induction of synaptic plasticity, learning is known to transiently perturb the metabolic homeostasis of its associated neural network (Keck, Hübener, et al, 2017; Kukushkin & Carew, 2017; Lee & Kirkwood, 2019; Smolen et al, 2016).…”