Subtitles section Play video
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[MUSIC]
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[MUSIC]
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[MUSIC]
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Psychologist Endel Tulving said, “Remembering is mental time travel”.
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Soy Latte for Joe…
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Thanks.
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Remembering is one of the greatest powers we possess…
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[SNEEZE]
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the ability to learn from our past, to return to where we have already been, so we can decide
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where we're going.
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"Oh man…"
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But can we return to where we’ve… never been?
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Soy Latte for Joe…
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Yeah… huh thanks?
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Could have sworn I just-
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[SNEEZE]
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Is it just me, or does this seem familiar? Feel I’ve seen this before.
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"Oh man…"
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Or as the French would say… déjà vu…
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As many as 90 percent of us will experience déjà vu during our lives, mainly in our
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teens and 20s, and almost never before age 8 or 9.
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Déjà vu isn’t a physical phenomenon we can pinpoint in a brain scan. It’s a feeling,
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and not one that we totally understand. But we’ve got a few theories.
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Our memories aren’t exact copies that we just write once and then store like files
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on a computer, or pictures in a box under our bed. Remembering is really more like reliving.
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Our brains are constantly scanning our senses to determine if what we’re experiencing
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is familiar.
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And once our brains label a stimulus as familiar, a different brain region called the hippocampus
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recalls the memory associated with it, re-firing the neural circuits that hold that piece of
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our past, and we live the experience again in our minds.
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If these steps get out of sync, if something is deemed familiar, but we fail to recall
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the context, that could be déjà vu.
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But that doesn’t explain why we can feel déjà vu for experiences that are truly unfamiliar,
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or why we don’t feel it for every familiar thing.
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Soy Latte for Joe…
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Yep.
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We don’t realize how hard our brain works behind the scenes, filtering our environment—
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[SNEEZE]
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—Gesundheit!— unconsciously determining if what we’re experiencing is new…until
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it doesn’t work. Oh!
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"Oh man…"
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Our various sensory inputs… smells, sounds, sights, are normally processed and mixed together
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as one event.
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Another déjà vu theory says if one of those stimuli is recorded out of sync, the late
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arriving information could be flagged as a different event, which makes it feel as if
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it’s happened before.
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Or it could be a malfunction in how memories are made in the first place. Normally, new
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experiences stop off in our short term memory before being written into long-term storage.
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Skip the first, and it could feel like we’re recalling new events as old ones.
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Or perhaps when we focus on one part of our environment, the rest of our world drifts
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to the unconscious, and when we snap back to reality it feels like we’ve been there
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before… because we have. Just now.
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These feelings of misplaced familiarity, are… familiar to us, but the what, the where, and
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the why of déjà vu remain unknown.
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Soy Latte for—
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Got it thanks. All in all, there are dozens of plausible explanations for it, maybe more
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than one is right. Bless you!
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There’s no neat answer, but no mind, or memory, is perfect. The only way we’ll get
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to the bottom of déjà vu is to experience it… all over again.
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"Oh man…"
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Yeah, I could’ve. Stay curious.