Have you ever wondered about the causes of the intriguing phenomenon of déjà vu?

I think we’ve all experienced it at one point or the other. You know, that familiar feeling when traveling to someplace you’ve never been before, yeah, that’s it. Maybe you have had a vision, or dreamt the location? The question is, what causes déjà vu?

Well, anyway, for the most part, you are experiencing this strange fuzzy sensation called déjà vu. Let’s learn about this all too familiar phenomenon of the mind.

What is déjà vu?

The word déjà vu is French for “already seen.” This phenomenon is present in about 80% of humans. So, since the majority of us have entertained this experience, we want to know why it occurs.

Michelle Hook Ph.D., assistant director in the Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, said,

“It is very difficult to study déjà vu in a laboratory. Understanding how memory storage works may shed some light on why some experience déjà vu and others do not.”

Is the Malfunctioning Brain What Causes Déjà Vu?

With this being said, we can take a look at where the memories are stored to make the connection. Memories are stored in the temporal lobe, where detecting familiar places and things are commonplace.

While it is unclear how this connects with déjà vu, clues were found connecting temporal lobe epilepsy patients to this phenomena. The best theory is that déjà vu could be an electrical malfunction in the brain, much like a temporal lobe seizure.

These seizures are created when dysfunctional nerve cell activity across the brain disrupts electrical impulses. In those who suffer from temporal lobe epilepsy, déjà vu occurs right before the seizure, kind of like a warning signal.

This explains the causes of déjà vu in epilepsy patients, but what about healthy people?

It seems there is a glitch in the brain even for those, otherwise, healthy individuals. Neurons fire across the brain creating sensations of the present being in the past. This would explain the causes of the déjà vu phenomenon and the “already happened” scenario.

Healthy people can also experience the “jerk” that those with epilepsy experience. In healthy people, it is the muscle spasm that occurs right before falling asleep.

Another theory of why healthy individuals experience déjà vu can be attributed to a mismatch in neural pathways. If something as small as a familiar smell is present, the brain can immediately try to recreate that environment where the small comes from.

This information could bypass short-term memory and go straight to long-term memory, causing misinformation. We experience the feeling that we have been here before, seen this before or feel as those we cannot quite place event from the past.

Hook said,

“Some suggest that when a difference in processing occurs along these pathways, the perception is disrupted and is experienced as two separate messages. The brain interprets the second version, through the slowed secondary pathway—as a separate perceptual experience—and thus, the inappropriate feeling of familiarity occurs.”

Wow! Could it be? Could déjà vu simply be a malfunction in the brain? According to this information, that’s exactly what causes the intriguing déjà vu. It could also be visions from a past life if you want to go the open mind route.

These explanations provide a way to understand déjà vu, but not entirely. There is still so much to learn about why we get these feelings. There is hope, however, that all mysteries of déjà vu will be revealed in the future. It’s only a matter of time.

Do you feel like you’ve read this before? Maybe you have or maybe your mind is playing tricks on you.


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This Post Has 4 Comments

  1. Divine Spirit

    past life recall perhaps?…peace

  2. true story

    this deja vu is from ghost,if you dont beliave then is your problem

    1. hey dillymilly am

      Is that so?

  3. Mike Devlin

    I cannot speak further than my own experience coupled with others I’ve spoken to, but most of my deja vu comes from dreams that I’ve had. Friends and even strangers I’ve spoken with have had the same experiences. It’s not just a feeling when this happens. Others and I can recall the dream and the approximate (if not exact) date of the dream.

    Unfortunately, science will never touch this, because it brings too many metaphysical issues into light (i.e. free will vs. determinism, etc).

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