Studies have shown that déjà vu is primarily visually oriented. Basically, you see something and suddenly get that déjà vu feeling. The visually triggered Déjà vu is by far the most common occurrence
No one knows for sure, but some people think that something occured to you in the past that was somewhat similar to what recently happened, or something reminded you of something that happened in the past. There's also the possibility that you've traveled back in time and have very faint memory of what happened, and there's the part that it's merely a feeling.
It is a cognizance of experiencing a memory as it happens in the present momment, a memory that seems to mirror in close relation, something that is happening in the present.
"deja vu" is the feeling of having seen something before and it happens because your mind has seen something else that is so similar that it has a hard time telling the difference between what you are seeing now and what you saw before.
Some studies suggest déjà vu is caused when one eye records what it sees and then straight after the other eye sees it but at a different time.
Several theories imply that déjà vu is caused by the brain itself. One is that déjà vu is triggered by a neurochemical action in the brain that is not connected to any actual experience in the past. It makes sense that that feeling may be caused by a brain state that has nothing to do with memory, because at the same time of feeling familiarity, we know that the event could not have happened before.
> In 1895 Frederic W. H. Myers, an English psychiatric researcher, suggested that one hemisphere of the brain received information a split second earlier than the other half. Myers theorized that the subconscious mind registered information sooner than the conscious mind, causing the sensation of déjà vu.
> Another explanation is based on the fact that there are portions of the brain that are specialized for the past, the present, and the future. If observation from the present is mixed up with or confused with parts of the brain that process memories from the past, those perceptions will feel like they are memories, and the person will feel that they are re-living a moment stored in long-term memory: déjà vu.
Studies have shown that déjà vu is primarily visually oriented. Basically, you see something and suddenly get that déjà vu feeling. The visually triggered Déjà vu is by far the most common occurrence
No one knows for sure, but some people think that something occured to you in the past that was somewhat similar to what recently happened, or something reminded you of something that happened in the past. There's also the possibility that you've traveled back in time and have very faint memory of what happened, and there's the part that it's merely a feeling.
It is a cognizance of experiencing a memory as it happens in the present momment, a memory that seems to mirror in close relation, something that is happening in the present.
"deja vu" is the feeling of having seen something before and it happens because your mind has seen something else that is so similar that it has a hard time telling the difference between what you are seeing now and what you saw before.
Some studies suggest déjà vu is caused when one eye records what it sees and then straight after the other eye sees it but at a different time.
Several theories imply that déjà vu is caused by the brain itself. One is that déjà vu is triggered by a neurochemical action in the brain that is not connected to any actual experience in the past. It makes sense that that feeling may be caused by a brain state that has nothing to do with memory, because at the same time of feeling familiarity, we know that the event could not have happened before.
> In 1895 Frederic W. H. Myers, an English psychiatric researcher, suggested that one hemisphere of the brain received information a split second earlier than the other half. Myers theorized that the subconscious mind registered information sooner than the conscious mind, causing the sensation of déjà vu.
> Another explanation is based on the fact that there are portions of the brain that are specialized for the past, the present, and the future. If observation from the present is mixed up with or confused with parts of the brain that process memories from the past, those perceptions will feel like they are memories, and the person will feel that they are re-living a moment stored in long-term memory: déjà vu.
You feel like you've lived that part of life before, like you know what's going ot happen. I get it quite frequently and I can always remember exactly what people will say and exactly what will happen. it might sound unbelieveable, and you can believe this or not, but one day i was taking part in a game of rounders and i was chatting at the back with one of my friends, and I had this sense of deja vu and i remembered the ball hurtling towards us. So I stepped outo f the way and pulled my friend with me just as the ball flew past. You can believe this or not. Everyone's entitled to their own opinions.
We get déjà vu frequently because we see pictures of future experiences when we dream. these are usually the dreams we do not remember consciously when we wake up but is stored in our subconscious memory. When we do have the experience in reality, to your brain the image is familiar, you have seen it all before in a dream!
well deja vu is a glitch in the matrix when the bad guys change something or your on drugs
It's when you get the feeling that you have been in a place or a situation before, but you know that you haven't been there in your present life.
it means either u have dreamt this before or in a past or future life you have been to the place where you had deja vu
Although a number of different theories have been proposed, researchers have not reached any universally accepted explanation of the cause of deja vu. See the Wikipedia article linked below.
the same thing happens twice
in 'deja vu-again'
No. Deja Vu is, in most cases, a by product of how memory functions. In some people Deja Vu is neurological and may be associated with epilepsy.
yes al people can get or already had deja vu?
deja vu occors in the temporal-lobe
The song "Deja Vu" is about drugs that eminem used to do.
Yes, but it will produce an endless loop?
The French term "DEJA vu" in English is "already seen".
there isn't a origin for deja vu. deja vu is the name given when the same thing happens more than once in a strange or unnatural way.
deja vu translated from French means 'already seen' it's usually enough on it's own. "Deja vu all over again" was coined by Yogi Berra. It's a joke.
I can honestly tell you as one of the 25,000 girls suing the entire deja vu corporation (stemming from the Minneapolis deja vu occurences) that yes! The Minneapolis deja vu did screw up big time (owners and managers) and they are getting sued.
When you think that you have seen or experience something before. Deja vu is french for 'seen before, you'
Someone Else's Deja Vu was created on 2008-08-07.