Nov 23, 2024
Do you know that strange sensation of walking into a room and feeling like you’ve been there before, even though you know you haven’t? Or when you hear someone say something for the first time, but there’s a certain familiarity to it that gives you pause? That’s déjà vu–a phenomenon that’s not well understood, but scientists have some ideas.  Déjà vu is the eerie feeling that you have had the same novel experience before. It’s a spontaneous, elusive sensation that reveals the workings of consciousness, allowing us to see the separation between what we feel and what we know to be true, explains Akira O’Connor, a psychologist and senior lecturer at the University of St. Andrews School of Psychology and Neuroscience. The experience occurs when certain brain regions, particularly those responsible for recognizing familiarity, “twitch” or send false familiarity signals. This causes a brief mix-up that triggers a sense of recognition and creates a conflict with your current perception. A self-aware déjà vu is your brain’s way of letting you know that the memory you’re experiencing is inaccurate—and that’s a good thing because it means your frontal lobes are working as they should be.  Get the Popular Science newsletter Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. Email address Sign up Thank you! By signing up you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. “Déjà vu is the process of correcting that error and making sure you don’t act as though you remember that thing,” said O’Connor, one of the few experts on déjà vu. “There are all sorts of reasons why I think that’s the case, but one of them is this paradox that for a memory error, if that’s what it is, déjà vu happens when people’s brains are at their healthiest.” (He added that, for people with certain conditions, like dementia, the frontal lobes may fail to fact-check properly, resulting in repeated sensations of familiarity. This can become disruptive, as everything begins to feel familiar even if those memories aren’t real. It can delay receiving a proper diagnosis since they appear to have regained their memories, even though they haven’t.) Although it is unclear why humans have this experience, most research into déjà vu suggests that it is a phenomenon related to the brain’s process for retrieving memories. Walking into a room would be the cue that triggers an involuntary retrieval of memory; there’d be no “access to content,” meaning there’s no memory to compare to the current moment, but the feeling of familiarity is there anyway. One small study examining déjà vu used immersive virtual reality to create standard everyday scenes—such as a bowling alley or a garden—which were shown to participants. They were then shown a new scene that was configured to spatially resemble a previously seen one. Study participants were more likely to report the strange feeling that something feels more familiar than it should while viewing these new but structurally similar scenes. Even if a scene isn’t an exact replica of a previous one, if it’s recognizable enough, it can trigger that uncanny feeling of familiarity and the inability to actually recall the original experience. It confirms that déjà vu is a memory error that also trips you out.  [ Related: Why do people hate the sound of their own voice? ] But perhaps the biggest gag of all is that there’s no real reason for humans to experience déjà vu; it’s just our brain’s glitchy way of rationalizing a puzzling human experience. “It tells us that we are sense-making machines. We are always trying to make sense of our environments and everything around us,” said O’Connor. “We spot patterns. We try to understand why things that are outside of us are happening.” “We just notice that it’s weird,” he added, “and then we carry on.” This story is part of Popular Science’s Ask Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something you’ve always wanted to know? Ask us. The post How does science explain déjà vu? It’s a brain glitch with a purpose. appeared first on Popular Science.
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