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You’re visiting somewhere new and suddenly you’re overcome with a peculiar feeling of familiarity - as though you’d been there before. Weird, huh?

But this isn’t the plot of a sci-fi movie. This is déjà vu and it may be one of the most mysterious of all our quirks of memory. To find out more, tv Bitesize spoke to Dr Akira O’Connor, a senior lecturer in the School of Psychology & Neuroscience at the University of St Andrews.

The outline of five semi-transparent heads overlapping one another
Image caption,
People have documented déjà vu for hundreds of years, but it wasn't studied until the 19th Century

What is déjà vu?

Déjà vu, a French term which translates to ‘already seen’, is a very common sensation, with studies showing that two-thirds of people have reportedly experienced it at least once in their lifetime.

“Déjà vu is amazing,” Dr O’Connor told tv Bitesize. “In scientific terms it’s an inappropriate sense of familiarity for something that we know to be unfamiliar.

“But what really captures people is your memory telling you one thing, but you knowing and piecing together that what your memory is telling you is wrong.”

But what actually causes it? For over a century scholars have had several ideas about what causes the experience. The term was possibly coined in the 1870s by the French philosopher Émile Boirac in a book called The Psychology of the Future.

Since then it has been attributed to everything, from paranormal or supernatural causes to timing issues. The latter theory speculated it could be the result of one eye signal - or a neuron feed - reaching the brain slightly quicker than the other.

The causes of déjà vu

But recreating what can be a fleeting experience in a laboratory environment poses its challenges. While there is no definitive answer to what causes déjà vu, there are a number of possible scientific explanations.

Dr O’Connor explained: “What we think happens during déjà vu relies on you having an understanding of the organisation of the brain.

“There’s a part of the brain in the medial temporal lobe - the part of your brain that sits near your cheekbones and your ears - that is associated with laying down memories and giving you the feeling of remembering things.”

“There’s another part of your brain at the front of the forehead, the frontal cortex, that is associated with what we call higher order cognition. So stuff like reasoning, decision making and fact-checking.”

Déjà vu may occur when, for some reason or another, something goes wrong in the medial temporal lobe that triggers a memory sensation known as familiarity. The brain then becomes overexcited and starts to signal that you’ve experienced this place, event or situation before. You then get a conscious feeling of finding something familiar.

This sensation is then believed to pass through the frontal cortex, where the brain will process whether there’s a chance you could have experienced the situation before. Once the fact-check processes determines that it’s not possible for this to have occurred, the frontal cortex will signal that the sensation was an error - completing the déjà vu cycle.

An animation of a person in a lab coat holding a jigsaw piece. A brain with a missing jigsaw piece.
Image caption,
The experience of déjà vu will decrease as you get older

Are there any benefits to déjà vu?

Research shows that the frequency of déjà vu may vary with age. Dr O’Connor told us: “We know people start reporting déjà vu at around the age of five.” From five, the it will increase until your early to mid-20s, where the experience peaks, before eventually decreasing during middle age.

But experiencing déjà vu can even be a positive thing. The phenomenon is a sign that the fact-checking part of the brain is functioning well and helping you to accurately remember situations or events.

“I think because people tend to think of déjà vu as a bit of a memory error, people tend to get worried about it.

“But on the whole, I would say it's a sign of a good, healthy brain and mind.”

Déjà vu isn’t the only illusion of memory. Jamais vu, meaning ‘never seen’, is the opposite of déjà vu and describes the experience of feeling unfamiliar with something that is very familiar to you. In 2023 Dr O’Connor and his collaborators were awarded the Ig Nobel Prize for Literature for their research on this topic.

“People who are using tv Bitesize will almost certainly have experienced that idea of having looked at a word so much that it starts to feel like it’s spelt wrong or you doubt that it really is a word.”

Unlike déjà vu, jamais vu is a memory quirk that can be induced easily. As part of this work, Dr O’Connor and his colleague studied the sensations participants felt when asked to repeatedly look or write out a series of words over and over. “We found that people were most likely to experience the sensation of unfamiliarity for the most frequently used words, so words like 'the'.

“I guess that makes sense because if you’re going to feel any kind of unfamiliarity, it’s going to seem the most weird if it’s something that’s super common and familiar to you.”

This article was published in April 2024

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