Sunday, October 2, 2011

What Exactly Is Deja Vu (and Should I Do Anything About It?) [Ask Lifehacker]

What Exactly Is Deja Vu (and Should I Do Anything About It?)Dear Lifehacker,
I've been experiencing d?ja vu more often lately?you know, that odd feeling where you can swear you've been somewhere before or had the same conversation with someone but really didn't. Is this bad? Should I be concerned? My friend says she used to get it a lot but hasn't for years. Should she be concerned? Is this just a glitch in the Matrix?

Thanks,
Seeing Glitches

Dear S.G.,
D?j? vu really is an uncanny feeling. The term in French literally means "already seen" and that's exactly why it's so unnerving: It really feels like you've already experienced a very specific event or been somewhere, even though you haven't (or, at least, you don't think so).

Further complicating the matter, there's no consensus yet on what exactly causes this phenomenon, though there are a lot of theories. Psychology Today points out a study that suggests that d?j? vu is just an extreme reaction of your brain's memory system when encountering things with lots of familiar objects just set up a little differently (for example, when you're in a restaurant configured almost identically to one you've been in before, you can get a powerful feeling of familiarity).

Scientists have found a possible cause for d?j? vu occurences in the brain. Popsci reports that mice lacking some specific receptors in the hippocampus area of the brain have responses similar to d?j? vu, so the theory is that d?j? vu can be just a temporary disorientation in the hippocampus, which is the part of the brain responsible for sense of direction and forming new memories.

To answer your questions, though, d?j? vu appears to be harmless for most people (as much as 70 percent of the population has reported experiencing it, according to Discovery's How Stuff Works), with higher rates of occurence in people age 15 to 25?so your friend's decreased d?j? vu experiences should be fine, too.

However... d?j? vu has also been associated with temporal-lobe epilepsy (one story shows a woman who had twenty years of d?j? vu episodes before finding out she had epilepsy). So, not to alarm you, but if you experience frequent d?j? vu, you may want to see a doctor.

Finally, have you been feeling anxious or stressed out lately? Wikipedia mentions a link between d?j? vu and anxiety, and you'll find lots of stressed out people on health forums who also say they've been experiencing more d?j? vu. So our Lifehacker tip for trying to stop d?j? vu from happening, if you want to, is good old stress and anxiety reduction.

Love,
Lifehacker

Photo remixed from an original by istolethetv.


You can follow or contact Melanie Pinola, the author of this post, on Twitter or Google+.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/LrnTN8Sesuo/what-exactly-is-deja-vu-and-should-i-do-anything-about-it

avignon stacy keibler stacy keibler asn dukan diet mark sanchez faith hill

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.