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Deja Vu Meaning and Why Do We Experience it

Deja Vu Meaning and Why Do We Experience it

Dรฉjร  Vu

Dรฉjร  Vu is literally translated from French to mean โ€œalready seen.โ€ It is a sense of having already seen somethingโ€”coupled with knowing you havenโ€™t actually seen it, which is why it catches many people so off guard. It is thought to be the equivalent of a small brain โ€œglitch,โ€ with two streams of thought colliding.

It is an incredibly common experience, something upwards of 97% of people are thought to have experienced at least once, with more than two-thirds of people experiencing it with some regularity.

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St. Augustine, an ancient philosopher, first referred to the concept of dรฉjร  vu in 400 AD as โ€œfalse memories,โ€ but French philosopher Emile Boirac was the first to use the term dรฉjร  vu in 1890. The first use of the phrase in the scientific world was from F.L. Arnaud, a neurologist who proposed to use it at a meeting of theย Societe Medico-Psychologique.ย 

Early research showed promise for dรฉjร  vu to be a sign that helped doctors diagnose epilepsy,ย but more recent research has shown it may be a matter of perception orย memory.

How Does Dรฉjร  Vu Happen?

It is believed that dรฉjร  vu may be the result of two different streams of awareness colliding: the experience of recognizing a current situation, alongside the feeling that this is an inaccurate recollection. A key feature is that the person realizes that they have not actually seen this before.

Sometimes, what happens is really a matter of split perceptionย and someone is processing a sight twice because they may have been distracted or their vision was obstructed for some reason.ย 

The second perception, immediately after the first one, becomes the one that is consciously experiencedโ€”but it feels unfamiliar because we are not cognizant of the first experience, which we only partially processed. 

Types Of Dรฉjร  Vu

Though the actual feeling of dรฉjร  vu is the same across people with healthy brains and those with neurological conditions, different things are happening in the brain during each of these types.

Those who do experience it more regularly show less grey matter than those who donโ€™t.5Grey matter is the outermost layer of the brain, and it is responsible for controlling movement, memory, and emotions. Typically, the more grey matter a brain has, the more effective it is.

In those with neurological conditions, three parts of the brain are impacted: the hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, and temporal neocortexโ€”areas that are associated with forming and retaining memories.

For those with epilepsy and dรฉjร  vu, alterations inย memoryย circuitry have been observed, meanwhile, alterations in emotional circuitry are seen in โ€œhealthyโ€ individuals experiencing dรฉjร  vu.ย Dรฉjร  vu is thought to perhaps be abnormal signaling within the medial temporal lobe, which governs memory processing, particularly visual memories.

The conditions that might experience more dรฉjร  vu than those with a healthy brain include:6

  • Schizophrenia
  • Epilepsy
  • Anxiety
  • Vascular dementia

The term dรฉjร  vu is the one most frequently used to capture these types of experiences, but there are actually many more of these phenomena.

Some other types you might experience:1

  • Dรฉjร  entendu: already heard
  • Dรฉjร  รฉprouvรฉ: already experienced 
  • Dรฉjร  fait: already done
  • Dรฉjร  pensรฉ: already thought
  • Dรฉjร  racontรฉ: already recounted
  • Dรฉjร  senti: already felt emotionally or already smelled
  • Dรฉjร  su: already known (the knowledge of)
  • Dรฉjร  trouvรฉ: already found
  • Dรฉjร  vรฉcu: already lived through
  • Dรฉjร  voulu: already wanted
Causes of Dรฉjร  Vu

Though most times, dรฉjร  vu is not a sign of anything serious, there are some possible factors7 that you might want to pay attention to if episodes of dรฉjร  vu are making you uncomfortable.

People who are tired and/or stressed often report episodes of dรฉjร  vu. This is thought to be because fatigue and stress typically affect both long- and short-term memory. 

A hypothesis is that excess amounts of dopamine may be implicated in experiences of dรฉjร  vu. In studies of temporal lobe epilepsy, the research shows that elevated levels of dopamine were detected in rodent models of temporal lobe epilepsy.

One strange case of dรฉjร  vu8ย is the use of the flu medications amantadine and Proin (phenylpropanolamine). A case study writes about a man who took this combination of medications to treat an infection of the flu and began experiencing several episodes of dรฉjร  vu per hourโ€”which stopped upon him stopping these medications.

Both of these medications, among their flu-symptom-reducing properties, work on the dopamine system, and it is thought that these dรฉjร  vu episodes were caused by an excess of dopamine in the system.8ย Epilepsy research shows that parts of the brain including the hippocampus are related to dysmensic symptoms (impaired memory) symptoms,

Who Gets Dรฉjร  Vu?

While anyone can experience dรฉjร  vu, those who experience it multiple times share some characteristics, according to research:9

  • High income
  • Well educated
  • Frequent travelers
  • Those who remember their dreams
  • Those who are politically liberal 
  • Ages 15-25

Epilepsy is the most common neurological condition to be associated with dรฉjร  vu, as it affects the temporal lobe of yourย brain, where vision is interpreted. There are several types of seizures, but it is simple partial seizures, also known as focal onset aware seizures, that are most often associated with deja vu experiences.

Impact of Dรฉjร  Vu

For most healthy individuals, dรฉjร  vu has no serious impact, other than a bit of a feeling of confusion momentarily. However, if you are experiencing frequent dรฉjร  vu (a few times a week or more), you may want to visit a neurologist to be evaluated for epilepsy or any other neurological conditions.

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