What Is... Deja Vu.

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What Is... Deja Vu.

itrainmonkeys
I don't know how many of you have experienced it.....but I sure have. It's usually from a dream that I ahve and anywhere from 1-6 months after that dream I will be in a situation where I feel like i've been doing or seeing it before. Like at one moment....everything just clicks. All the angles and views, the action that is going on.....sometimes even the discussion. It's crazy but i've felt deja vu. Now IDK if it's all in my head or what....but i've felt it and it's pretty neat. I like it and just smile whenever it occurs. I try to explain to people but they're just like yea whatever.

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Unregistered 012
Deja Vu to me is where you are doing something that you swear that you have done before. Like you have a dream and then a few days or weeks later you do the thing that you did in your dream. It happens to me quite often. I think it is kinda weird too.

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zyzzyvette
What's even weirder is when you your your original dream pops back into your head a few moments before, so you know something is about to happen a little before it actually does (rather then "remembering" during or after). Crazy stuff; hopefully someone will figure it out for sure one day so I can find out why it happens. biggrin.gif

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hybridsystem
I don't agree with the whole past life experience stuff. I'm sorry I just don't. I'm too stuck in this Matrix that my physics teacher shows me. Same reason I don't believe in God. If my crappy survival of the fittest senses can't work it out then I can't work it out. I don't believe in God becuase I can't see him, get me? Although I do ponder on things such as god I do normally end up just reverting back to what I thought before, what is written in physics books.

Anyway, someone once told me what they belive deja vu is and I think it's the best explanation for it that I have heard.

The brain thinks quicker than our nerves and senses and sometimes if our sense send information to our brain in two parts, such as YOUR RIGHT HAND JUST TOUCHED AN OVEN, then it sent THE OVER IS HOT. You move your hand away, though it takes a second due to this sensory delay. Also, some senses are faster than others, for example touching something hot automatically makes you withdraw your hand but trying to press the stop button when the screen goes red (like on reaction tests).

So, say one sense says WE ARE IN THIS SITUATION, your brain reconginses this and logs it in memory, then ANOTHER sense says WE ARE IN THIS SITUATION your brain loads it's memorys (though it has no idea how old they are) and goes, WOW, we've beem here before.

Therefore, under this theory, deja vu (in most cases, of course the whole dream thing is not explained) is merely a sensory 'delay' as our brain goes to quickly...

That was quite hard to explain, do you all understand what I mean?

 

 

 


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irdix
I got what u've said hybridsystem smile.gif it's quite nice explanation smile.gif and it's very nice that you don't believe in god since you "can't see" Him. -back to topic-

well I know few friends who talks about past lifes, matrix stuff and things about dejavu's explanation, I just had one question for them.. "did you find it out by yourself or you just simply believe what other people said when your mind said 'hey it's a nice explanation' ? ", so how about it.. ?

I agree with something u said hybridsystem, we simply often decide something by our memory or past experience (sometimes it's good, sometimes it's bad -how good or bad is relative- ) when doing, facing and act on things.. smile.gif

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rval
In recent years, déjà vu has been subjected to serious psychological and neurophysiological research. The most likely explanation of déjà vu is that it is not an act of "precognition" or "prophecy", but rather an anomaly of memory; it is the impression that an experience is "being recalled". [citation needed] This explanation is substantiated by the fact that the sense of "recollection" at the time is strong in most cases, but that the circumstances of the "previous" experience (when, where and how the earlier experience occurred) are quite uncertain. Likewise, as time passes, subjects can exhibit a strong recollection of having the "unsettling" experience of déjà vu itself, but little to no recollection of the specifics of the event(s) or circumstance(s) they were "remembering" when they had the déjà vu experience. In particular, this may result from an overlap between the neurological systems responsible for short-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the present) and those responsible for long-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the past). Many theorists believe that the memory anomaly occurs when one's conscious mind has a slight delay in receiving perceptive input. In other words, the unconscious mind perceives current surroundings before the conscious mind does. This causes one's conscious self to perceive something that is already in one's memory, even though it was in one's memory only a split second before it was perceived.

A clinical correlation has been found between the experience of déjà vu and disorders such as schizophrenia and anxiety,[9] and the likelihood of the experience considerably increases with subjects having these conditions. However, the strongest pathological association of déjà vu is with temporal lobe epilepsy. This correlation has led some researchers to speculate that the experience of déjà vu is possibly a neurological anomaly related to improper electrical discharge in the brain. As most people suffer a mild (i.e. non-pathological) epileptic episode regularly (e.g. the sudden "jolt", a hypnagogic jerk, that frequently occurs just prior to falling asleep), it is conjectured that a similar (mild) neurological aberration occurs in the experience of déjà vu, resulting in an erroneous sensation of memory.


It has been reported that certain recreational drugs increase the chances of déjà vu occurring in the user. Some pharmaceutical drugs, when taken together, have also been implicated in the cause of déjà vu. Taiminen and Jääskeläinen (2001) reported the case of an otherwise healthy male who started experiencing intense and recurrent sensations of déjà vu on taking the drugs amantadine and phenylpropanolamine together to relieve flu symptoms. He found the experience so interesting that he completed the full course of his treatment and reported it to the psychologists to write-up as a case study. Due to the dopaminergic action of the drugs and previous findings from electrode stimulation of the brain (e.g. Bancaud, Brunet-Bourgin, Chauvel, & Halgren, 1994), Taiminen and Jääskeläinen speculate that déjà vu occurs as a result of hyperdopaminergic action in the mesial temporal areas of the brain.

The similarity between a déjà vu-eliciting stimulus and an existing, but different, memory trace may lead to the sensation. Thus, encountering something which evokes the implicit associations of an experience or sensation that cannot be remembered may lead to déjà vu. In an effort to experimentally reproduce the sensation, Banister and Zangwill (1941) used hypnosis to give participants posthypnotic amnesia suggestions for material they had already seen. When this was later re-encountered, the restricted activation caused by the posthypnotic amnesia resulted in three of the 10 participants reporting what the authors termed paramnesias. Memory-based explanations may lead to the development of a number of non-invasive experimental methods by which a long sought-after analogue of déjà vu can be reliably produced that would allow it to be tested under well-controlled experimental conditions.

Interesting isn't it?

Notice from BuffaloHELP:
What's more interesting is that you copied this from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deja_Vu

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dmntr
or I've had that feeling several time or I'm crazy

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