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Déjà Vu
How Déjà Vu Works
Have
you ever visited a store for the first time and had it feel eerily familiar?
Or
maybe you're deep in conversation with a friend and you suddenly get the
feeling that you've had the exact conversation before, even though you know
that you haven't.
If
you've ever found yourself in either of these situations, you've experienced
déjà vu.
Sixty
to 70 percent of us admit to getting this feeling at least once in our lives.
The
sight, sound, taste or even smell of something makes us think that
we've experienced it before, although we know that we couldn't have.
There
are more than 40 theories as to what déjà vu is and what causes it, and they
range from reincarnation to glitches in our memory processes.
In
this article, we'll explore a few of those theories to shed some light on this
little understood phenomenon.
Déjà
vu is a French term that
literally means "already seen" and has several variations,
including déjà vécu, already experienced; déjà senti,
already thought; and déjà visité, already visited.
French
scientist Emile Boirac, one of the first to study this strange phenomenon, gave
the subject its name in 1876.
There
are often references to déjà vu that aren't true déjà vu.
Researchers
have their own definitions, but generally déjà vu is described as the feeling
that you've seen or experienced something before when you know you haven't.
The
most common misuse of the term déjà vu seems to be with precognitive
experiences -- experiences where someone gets a feeling that they know
exactly what's going to happen next, and it does.
An
important distinction is that déjà vu is experienced during an event, not
before.
Precognitive
experiences -- if they are real -- show things that will happen in the future,
not things that you've already experienced.
(However,
one theory about déjà vu deals with precognitive dreams that give us a
"déjà vu feeling" afterwards. See
the Déjà Vu and Precognitive Dreams section.)
Hallucinations
that are brought on by illness or drugs sometimes bring a heightened
awareness and are confused with déjà vu.
False
memories that are brought on by schizophrenia can be confused with
déjà vu as well.
Unlike
true déjà vu, which typically lasts from 10 to 30 seconds, these false memories
or hallucinations can last much longer.
Types of Déjà Vu
Defining types of déjà vu is a very slippery area.
Those
who have studied it have applied their own categories and differentiations --
each usually tied to a specific theory about what causes déjà vu.
Alan
Brown, a professor of psychology at South Methodist University and author
of "The Déjà Vu Experience: Essays in Cognitive Psychology," has
three categories for déjà vu.
He
believes there is déjà vu caused by biological dysfunction (e.g.,
epilepsy), implicit familiarity and divided perception.
In
1983, Dr. Vernon Neppe, Director of the Pacific Neuropsychiatric Institute in
Seattle, proposed four subcategories of déjà vu, including epileptic, subjective
paranormal, schizophrenic and associative.
Taking
a very broad look at the research and resources available, we can put déjà vu
experiences into two categories and then see the more subtle distinctions that
researchers have placed on it:
· Associative déjà vu - The most common type of déjà vu experienced by normal,
healthy people is associative in nature.
You see, hear, smell or otherwise experience
something that stirs a feeling that you associate with something you've seen,
heard, smelled or experienced before.
Many researchers think that this type of déjà vu is a
memory-based experience and assume that the memory centers of the brain are
responsible for it.
· Biological déjà vu - There are also high occurrences of déjà vu among people
with temporal lobe epilepsy. Just before having a seizure they often experience
a strong feeling of déjà vu.
This has given researchers a slightly more reliable
way of studying déjà vu, and they've been able to identify the areas of the
brain where these types of déjà vu signals originate.
However, some researchers say that this type of déjà
vu is distinctly different from typical déjà vu.
The person experiencing it may truly believe they've
been through the exact situation before, rather than getting a feeling that
quickly passes.
Déjà
vu also occurs with some predictability in major psychiatric disorders, including
anxiety, depression, dissociative disorders and schizophrenia.
Next,
we'll look at how researchers have studied this phenomenon.
Studying Déjà Vu
Déjà vu is extremely difficult to study because it
occurs briefly, unannounced, only in certain people, and has no witnesses or
physical manifestations other than the person saying, "hey, déjà vu!"
Because
of this, there is little firm research and no definitive explanations.
Déjà
vu studies must depend on personal descriptions and recollection for data.
For
two centuries people have tried to come up with reasons we experience déjà vu.
From
philosophers, to psychologists, to paranormal experts, they've all had their
theories.
Emile
Boirac was a French psychic researcher who was the first to use the term déjà
vu in his book, "L'Avenir des Sciences Psychiques."
He
did not research the phenomenon in depth, however.
Sigmund
Freud theorized that these experiences resulted from repressed desires or
memories related to a stressful event that people could no longer access as
regular memory.
Scientists
used this theory, called paramnesia, to explain déjà vu for a large
part of the 20th century.
Over
the years, many scientists ignored déjà vu completely due to its frequent
association with past life experiences, ESP and alien abductions.
These
associations gave the study of déjà vu a bit of a stigma.
Recently,
researchers have set aside some of those associations and have begun putting
brain imaging technology to work.
Firmly
placing déjà vu within the study of memory, they hope to discover more about
how memories are formed, stored and retrieved.
They
have since determined that the medial temporal lobe is
involved in our conscious memory.
Within
the medial temporal lobe are the parahippocampal gyrus, the rhinal
cortex and the amygdala.
John
D.E. Gabrieli at Stanford University found in 1997 that the hippocampus enables
us to consciously recall events.
He
also found that the parahippocampal gyrus enables us to determine what's
familiar and what isn't (and without actually retrieving a specific memory to
do it).
While
about 60 percent of people say they have experienced déjà vu, the rates are
highest among people between the ages of 15 and 25.
The
upper age varies among researchers, but most agree that déjà vu experiences
decrease with age.
There
have also been higher reported occurrences among those with higher incomes,
those who tend to travel more and those with higher education levels.
Active
imaginations and the ability to recall dreams has also been a commonality
among people who report déjà vu experiences.
Some
researchers also report that the more tired or stressed you are, the more
likely you are to experience déjà vu.
Other
researchers, however, have seen just the opposite.
They
report that the more refreshed and relaxed you are, the more likely you are to
experience déjà vu.
Obviously,
the jury is still out about a lot of things related to déjà vu.
One
reported finding is that the more open-minded or politically liberal a person
is, the more likely they are to experience déjà vu.
However,
this may also mean that the more open-minded you are, the more likely you are
to talk about something potentially seen as "weird," like déjà vu.
Divided Attention (the Cell Phone Theory)
Dr. Alan Brown has attempted to recreate a process
that he thinks is similar to déjà vu.
In
studies at Duke University and SMU, he and colleague Elizabeth Marsh put the
idea of subliminal suggestion to the test.
They
showed photographs of various locations to a group of students, with the
plan to ask them which locations were familiar.
Prior
to showing them some of the photographs, however, they flashed the photos onto
the screen at subliminal speeds -- around 10 to 20 milliseconds -- which is
long enough for the brain to register the photo but not long enough for
the student to be consciously aware of it.
In
these experiments, the images that had been shown subliminally were familiar at
a much higher rate than those that were not -- even though those students who
had actually been to those locations had been pulled from the study.
Larry
Jacoby and Kevin Whitehouse of Washington University did similar studies using
lists of words with similar results using lists of words.
Based
on this idea, Alan Brown proposed what he calls the cell phone theory (or
divided attention).
This
means that when we are distracted with something else, we subliminally take in
what's around us but may not truly register it consciously.
Then,
when we are able to focus on what we are doing, those surroundings appear to
already be familiar to us even when they shouldn't be.
With
this in mind, it is reasonable to see how we might walk into a house for the
first time, perhaps while talking to our host, and experience déjà vu.
It
would work like this: before we've actually looked at the room, our brains have
processed it visually and/or by smell or sound, so that when we actually look
at it we get a feeling that we've been there before.
More Déjà Vu Theories
The Hologram Theory
Dutch psychiatrist Hermon Sno proposed the idea that
memories are like holograms, meaning that you can recreate the entire
three-dimensional image from any fragment of the whole.
The
smaller the fragment, however, the fuzzier the ultimate picture. Déjà vu, he
says, happens when some detail in the environment we are currently in (a sight,
sound, smell, et cetera) is similar to some remnant of a memory of our past and
our brain recreates an entire scene from that fragment.
Other
researchers also agree that some small piece of familiarity may be the seed
that creates the déjà vu feeling.
For
example, you might go for a ride with a friend in an old 1964 Plymouth and
have a strong déjà vu experience without actually remembering (or even being
aware of the fact) that your grandfather had the same type of car and you're
actually remembering riding in that car as a small child.
Things
like the smell and the look and feel of the seat or dashboard can bring back
memories you didn't even know you had.
Dual Processing (or Delayed Vision)
Another theory is based on the way our brain processes
new information and how it stores long- and short-term memories.
Robert
Efron tested an idea at the Veterans Hospital in Boston in 1963 that stands as
a valid theory today.
He
proposed that a delayed neurological response causes déjà vu.
Because
information enters the processing centers of the brain via more than one path,
it is possible that occasionally that blending of information might not
synchronize correctly.
Efron
found that the temporal lobe of the brain's left hemisphere is responsible for
sorting incoming information.
He
also found that the temporal lobe receives this incoming information twice with
a slight (milliseconds-long) delay between transmissions -- once directly and
once again after its detour through the right hemisphere of the brain.
If
that second transmission is delayed slightly longer, then the brain might put
the wrong timestamp on that bit of information and register it as a previous
memory because it had already been processed.
That
could explain the sudden sense of familiarity.
"Memories" From Other Sources
This theory proposes that we have many stored memories
that come from many aspects of our lives, including not only our own
experiences but also movies, pictures we've seen and books we've read.
We
can have very strong memories of things we've read about or seen without
actually experiencing, and over time, these memories may be pushed back in our
minds.
When
in we see or experience something that is very similar to one of those
memories, we might experience a feeling of déjà vu.
For
example, as a child we may have seen a movie that had a scene in a famous
restaurant or at a famous landmark.
Then,
as an adult, we visit the same location without remembering the movie, and the
location appears to be very familiar to us.
THE FULL
DEJA VU EXPERIENCE
Below
are names for some of the many ways in which the déjà experience may manifest:
·
déjà
entendu - already heard
·
déjà
éprouvé - already experienced
·
déjà fait - already done
·
déjà pensé - already thought
·
déjà
raconté - already recounted
·
déjà senti - already felt, smelt
·
déjà su - already known (intellectually)
·
déjà
trouvé - already found (met)
·
déjà vécu - already lived
·
déjà voulu - already desired
Neppe (in conjunction with Prof.
B. G. Rogers, Professor of French, University of the Witwatersrand) in 1981
suggested the following additional terms:
·
déjà
arrivé - already happened
·
déjà connu - already known (personal knowing)
·
déjà dit - already said/spoken (content of speech)
·
déjà gouté - already tasted
·
déjà lu - already read
·
déjà parlé - already spoken (act of speech)
·
déjà
pressenti - already sensed
·
déjà
rencontré - already met
·
déjà rêvé - already dreamt
·
déjà
visité - already visited
Déjà rencontré appears preferable to déjà trouvé for
the already met experience because it specifically relates to interpersonal
situations [Source: The Various Manifestations of Déjà Vu Experience].
Déjà Vu and Precognitive Dreams
Some researchers, including Swiss scientist Arthur
Funkhouser, firmly believe that precognitive dreams are the source of many
déjà vu experiences.
J.W.
Dunne, an aeronautical engineer who designed planes in World War II,
conducted studies in 1939 using students of Oxford University.
His
studies found 12.7 percent of his subjects' dreams to have similarities with
future events.
Recent
studies, including one by Nancy Sondow in 1988, have had similar results of 10
percent.
These
researchers also tied evidence of precognitive dreams to déjà vu experiences
that occurred anywhere from one day to eight years later.
The
question has been raised about why the experiences themselves are typically
mundane everyday things.
One
explanation from Funkhouser is that something more exciting is more likely to
be remembered, making a déjà vu experience less likely.
Although
déjà vu has been studied as a phenomenon for over a hundred years and
researchers have advanced tens of theories about its cause, there is no simple
explanation for what it means or why it happens.
Perhaps
as technology advances and we learn more about how the brain works, we will
also learn more about why we experience this strange phenomenon.
CHRONIC DÉJÀ VU
Recently,
there have been studies of people who have what researchers are terming
"chronic déjà vu."
Four senior citizens in the
United Kingdom have experienced déjà vuin a constant state.
They refused to watch the news
because they felt like they already knew what was going to be said (even though
they really didn't).
Or, they wouldn't go to the
doctor because they felt like they had already been and didn't see the point.
Researchers have suggested that
these individuals have experienced a failure in the temporal lobe.
The circuits that are activated
when you remember something have gotten stuck in the "on" position,
so to speak.
This has essentially created
memories that don't actually exist.
Lee Ann Obringer, Contributing Writer
Lee Ann Obringer holds a bachelor's degree in journalism and advertising with an outside concentration in marketing from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In addition to writing for HowStuffWorks, she works as a freelance marketing communications consultant and designer.
Lee Ann Obringer holds a bachelor's degree in journalism and advertising with an outside concentration in marketing from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In addition to writing for HowStuffWorks, she works as a freelance marketing communications consultant and designer.
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