Origin of Deja Vu Pinpointed

By kHong, published Jun 08, 2007
Published Content: 41  Total Views: 12,692  Favorited By: 3 CPs
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A study of deja vu has revealed that the source comes from the hippocampus. In the brain, the hippocampus is located under the temporal lobe, and forms an essential part of the limbic system. The limbic system deals with emotion, incentives, and emotional association with memory. There, the hippocampus contributes to the system by playing a significant role in memory.

New studies suggest that a certain part of the hippocampus named the dentate gyrus is responsible for "episodic" memories in the human mind. These memories come from our life's experiences, and enable us to tell between the differences of similar places and situations apart.

Déjà vu is where one experiences the feeling that they have already previously witnessed or experienced a situation. Often times, it is called "experiencing the future."

According to LiveScience, MIT neuroscientist Susumu Tonegawa says this finding explains why as people grow older, they tend to experience déjà vu. According to Tonegawa, the dentate gyrus jots down a certain situation's pattern, and keeps it for the body's future reference. Think of it almost as a computer keeping track of its activities, as well as an Internet history where cookies and temporary Internet files are stored for faster reference for later. What the dentate gyrus takes note of are visual, auditory, olfactory, and such senses that are stored in the memory to be retrieved in the future.

Origin of Deja Vu Pinpointed
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