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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: This new study might actually explain the weirdness that is déjà vu ScienceAlert... In French, déjà vu literally translates to "already seen", and describes the phenomenon of having the strong feeling that the experience youre having right now has already been experienced by you in the past. Its clearly not a glitch in the Matrix, but scientists have been struggling for centuries to explain what prompts a feeling of déjà vu - and why. But now a team of neuroscientists just might have an answer. Led by Akira OConnor from the University of St Andrews in the UK, the team figured out how to trigger a feeling of déjà vu in a lab setting - making something thats spontaneous, fleeting, and unpredictable a little bit easier to nail down. They did this by slightly tweaking a neat trick used by neuroscientists to implant false memories in the minds of their participants. As Jessica Hamzelou explains for New Scientist, this involves reciting a list of related words, such as bed, pillow, night, and dream, but deliberately leaving out the single, most obvious word that links them all - in this case, sleep. The participants are later asked about all the words they were told, and more often than not, will swear they heard "sleep", along with the others. So thats how you implant a false memory, but its not quite the same thing as déjà vu. So OConnor and his team added a step. In the first part of the experiment, where the participants were hearing the related words, the researchers asked them if theyd heard a word starting with "S". Of course, they hadnt, so the participants replied "No." Later, when the participants were asked to recall all the words theyd heard, they knew from earlier that they hadnt heard a word starting with "S", but at the same time, the false memory of sleep had been implanted, so it somehow felt familiar. "They report having this strange experience of déjà vu," OConnor told Hamzelou. Trying this technique out on 21 participants, the researchers observed what was happening in their brains as they experienced the feeling of déjà vu. Interestingly, even though the technique involved a memory exercise and the participants were given a false memory, the parts of the brain related to memory werent the ones that lit up in the fMRI scans. At the International Conference on Memory in Budapest, Hungary, last month, OConnor told his peers that during the experience of déjà vu, frontal areas of the brain associated with decision-making were activated. So what does decision-making have to do with the feeling that youve experienced something before? OConnor told New Scientist that he suspects the feeling is caused by the brain sifting through its memory bank, and signalling that theres some kind of error - I feel like Ive experienced this before, but have no memory of it. Just like sitting in a car makes our brains freak out because part of us thinks were moving and part of us thinks were staying still - a conflict that can often result in a very physical (and sometimes messy) response - the conflict in thinking you have a specific memory but dont results in a very distinct feeling. "It suggests there may be some conflict resolution going on in the brain during déjà vu," Stefan Köhler from the University of Western Ontario in Canada, who wasnt involved in the study, told New Scientist. To be clear, the study is a very small one, and the results have yet to be formally peer-reviewed, so were talking about very early findings here, and speculations that need to be backed up by further, much larger experiments. Theres also the fact that artificially triggered episodes of déjà vu might be so different to the déjà vu we experience 'in the wild', that the results dont actually reflect whats really going on. But its an intriguing starting point, and puts us on a different path from the conventional wisdom that just put déjà vu down to some particularly strong false memories. It could be something far more complex than that. OConnor and his team are continuing their investigation, and hope to figure out whats going on in the minds of people who never experience déjà vu - around 60 to 80 percent of people have reportedly experienced it - and whether or not its a good thing for our brains to do. On the one hand, it might be beneficial, because déjà vu signals that our brains ability to check the memory bank is in good working order, but on he other, maybe it's just making us paranoid. "It could be that déjà vu experiences make people cautious, because they might not trust their memory as much," says Köhler. "But we dont have any evidence for that yet." Another hypothesis that the team might have to address at some point is that déjà vu could be triggered by the rhinal neural system, thought to be involved in the detection of familiarity. As psychologist Amy Reichelt from RMIT University in Australia explained for The Conversation, activation of the rhinal neural system occurs without activation of the memory system in the hippocampus. "This leads to the feeling of recognition without specific details," she says - a conflict in the brain that could result in the feeling of déjà vu. And btw, if you think you experience déjà vu a lot, spare a thought for this 23-year-old man in the UK, who is reportedly stuck in an ongoing eight-year loop of déjà vu. http://www.sciencealert.com/man-trapped-in-an-8-year-groundhog-day-loop-baffles-scientists Groundhog Day IRL is a whole lot less funny without that fat, prescient rodent. >community.lovenature.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2016/02/F9B5D694-DD80-6062-FB3040C13E859C1A.jpg"> Poster Comment: déjà vu could be something dreamed, not actually experienced. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
It could be parts of old memories from past lives, too. DNA stores information of all kinds.
Wow, yeah! Sitting in my car makes my brain freak out. I start involuntarily crapping my pants, banging my head on the windshield, screaming the Gettysburg Address and playing air guitar!! :-) _____________________________________________________________ USA! USA! USA! Bringing you democracy, or else! there were strains of VD that were incurable, and they were first found in the Philippines and then transmitted to the Korean working girls via US military. The 'incurables' we were told were first taken back to a military hospital in the Philippines to quietly die. 4um
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