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  • Hey, Vsauce, Michael here, and today we're going to discuss Deja vu. What is it, and

  • why does it occur? You know, those moments where the current situation feels like it's

  • happened before? You're certain it has, but you don't know when, or how it became so familiar.

  • It's difficult to scientifically study Deja vu because there's no reliable way to cause

  • it to happen in people's heads in a laboratory.

  • But here's what we do know: humans don't seem to experience Deja vu until they're at least 8 or 9 years old.

  • It's most frequent in your teens and twenties, and then tapers off as you get older.

  • So, it might have something to do with brain development. In fact, we should probably go get ourselves a brain.

  • That was easy. Now, like a stomach ache,Deja vu may be a symptom with many possible causes.

  • A lot of the popular theories about what causes

  • it involve a disconnect that may be occurring between the deep structures of the brain that

  • process our experiences unconsciously, and the parts of the brain that are conscious

  • about what they experience, process it, and then tell us what we're seeing.

  • For the sake of simplicity, let's begin with the visual system. Now, the brain sits in

  • your head like this, and your eyeballs are over here seeing things, sending that signal

  • to the back of the brain, the Occipital lobe, where visual cortex is. That's where the image

  • is processed and we become aware of what we're seeing. But visual cortex isn't the first

  • stop that information makes. Instead, we know that it stops in lots of other places. For

  • instance, the amygdala, where it may be processed at an involuntary emotional level, and this

  • fun little part right here, #31, the tectum. It's involved in preliminary visual processing

  • and helps control eye movements.

  • Now, that fact is incredibly important because what it means is that people with blindness

  • cause by brain damage to the visual cortex cannot see anything. They don't report seeing

  • or recognizing anything; however, the other preliminary parts of the brain that get that

  • message are still healthy, and so, despite being legally blind, these people exhibit

  • what is known as blindsight.

  • They can defy all odds and avoid an obstacle course on the ground. They can also be presented

  • faces showing joy, or anxiety and fear, and feel, without knowing why, at all, on Earth they feel

  • that way, a similar emotion.

  • So, a lot is going on when we look at things, and if those preliminary structures in the

  • vision system allow certain blind people to be oddly and unconsciously aware of what they're

  • looking at, we may have the ingredients we need for this disconnect.

  • Think of it this way: If I experience event A, and then B, and then C, and the inner parts

  • of my brain commit it to memory and generate an emotional response, but then, a fraction

  • of a second later, out-of-sync, my visual cortex finally gets around to telling me,

  • the conscious aware part of my brain, what I'm seeing. It will say "Ok guys, we're looking

  • at A, and then B, and then..." and then the brain says "Whoa, whoa, whoa, wait, wait,

  • and then C, right? That's already happened I thought?..." and that may be Deja vu.

  • But what could call these processes dealing with the same information to get temporarily

  • out-of-sync like that? Well, it's probably a neurological abnormality, possibly an epileptic

  • episode where neurons all fire in sync. We also know that patients who experience chronic

  • and persistent Deja vu tend to have brain damage in the temporal lobes of their brain-

  • these lobes on either side.

  • Well that sounds kinda bad, right? I mean, when I experience Deja vu should I run to the doctor

  • right away? Well, not at all. In fact, minor epileptic events are quite common. You've

  • probably experienced a similar phenomenon known as a Hypnogogic Jerk. That's a fancy

  • name for what occurs when you're about to fall asleep and then all of the sudden you

  • feel like you're falling, or that you tripped, and your body jolts itself awake.

  • What's going on there is that as you fall asleep your muscles relax, and some part of

  • your brain that's still awake notices that, and feels like you're no longer supported-

  • you must be falling- and it sends out a huge signal that causes all of your muscles to

  • twitch, waking you up.

  • Oh, and Deja vu is not the only "vu" out there. There's also something known as Presque vu,

  • or "tip of the tongue," and this is what happens when you're familiar with something, you know

  • you know it, but, for the life of you, at that moment, you cannot recall it. It's like "what's

  • that actor's name from that movie? I've seen it 18 times, how can I not remember it?? Wow."

  • One explanation of how that happens is that other words similar to the target word are

  • being remembered, and to help you out your brain is actively blocking other stuff around

  • it, including the word you're actually looking for. Now, this explanation is really nice

  • cause it might actually explain why Presque vu has a shared, or social aspect. Even a

  • bunch of people in a group, all with special brains, if they're given the same "blocking

  • words" that are related, no one in the group can come up with the name until the subject

  • is changed and those words are no longer blocked, and then all the sudden someone goes "Oh,

  • Gary Sinise, that's who it was. Yup, there you go."

  • Ok, finally, Jamais vu. This is when something that you know, something that you're familiar

  • with, all the sudden seems brand new and bizarre. Schizophrenic patients will sometimes see

  • people they know and insist that it's not the person the know. Instead, it's an imposter.

  • But all of us have probably experienced Jamais vu to a certain extent, for instance, when

  • you repeat a word over, and over, and over, and over again, the word starts to lose its

  • meaning and you start to think "What? How is this even a word? It's so weird!" Well,

  • scientists believe that happens because continuing to excite the neurons responsible for that

  • word causes them to become inhibited, and further use is less intense.

  • It is just crazy to think that there is so much out there in the world, in the universe,

  • that we don't know, that we don't understand, that we haven't yet discovered. But, yet,

  • that very feeling of familiarity for what we do know can't always be trusted. About

  • the only constant seems to be: As always, thanks for watching.

Hey, Vsauce, Michael here, and today we're going to discuss Deja vu. What is it, and

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