What is dj vu What is dj vu Michael Molina

Have you experienced déjà vu?

It’s that shadowy feeling you get
when a situation seems familiar.

A scene in a restaurant plays out
exactly as you remember.

The world moves like a ballet
you’ve choreographed,

but the sequence can’t be based
on a past experience

because you’ve never eaten here before.

This is the first time you’ve had clams,

so what’s going on?

Unfortunately, there isn’t
one single explanation for déjà vu.

The experience is brief
and occurs without notice,

making it nearly impossible
for scientists to record and study it.

Scientists can’t simply sit around
and wait for it to happen to them –

this could take years.

It has no physical manifestations

and in studies,

it’s described by the subject
as a sensation or feeling.

Because of this lack of hard evidence,

there’s been a surplus
of speculation over the years.

Since Emile Boirac introduced déjà vu

as a French term meaning “already seen,”

more than 40 theories attempt
to explain this phenomenon.

Still, recent advancements in neuroimaging
and cognitive psychology

narrow down the field of prospects.

Let’s walk through three of today’s
more prevalent theories,

using the same
restaurant setting for each.

First up is dual processing.

We’ll need an action.

Let’s go with a waiter
dropping a tray of dishes.

As the scene unfolds,

your brain’s hemispheres process
a flurry of information:

the waiter’s flailing arms,

his cry for help,

the smell of pasta.

Within milliseconds, this information
zips through pathways

and is processed into a single moment.

Most of the time,
everything is recorded in-sync.

However, this theory asserts

that déjà vu occurs
when there’s a slight delay

in information from one of these pathways.

The difference in arrival times

causes the brain to interpret
the late information

as a separate event.

When it plays
over the already-recorded moment,

it feels as if it’s happened before

because, in a sense, it has.

Our next theory deals
with a confusion of the past

rather than a mistake in the present.

This is the hologram theory,

and we’ll use that tablecloth
to examine it.

As you scan its squares,

a distant memory swims up
from deep within your brain.

According to the theory,

this is because memories are stored

in the form of holograms,

and in holograms,

you only need one fragment
to see the whole picture.

Your brain has identified the tablecloth
with one from the past,

maybe from your grandmother’s house.

However, instead of remembering
that you’ve seen it at your grandmother’s,

your brain has summoned up the old memory

without identifying it.

This leaves you stuck with familiarity,
but no recollection.

Although you’ve never been
in this restaurant,

you’ve seen that tablecloth
but are just failing to identify it.

Now, look at this fork.

Are you paying attention?

Our last theory is divided attention,

and it states that déjà vu occurs

when our brain subliminally
takes in an environment

while we’re distracted
by one particular object.

When our attention returns,

we feel as if we’ve been here before.

For example, just now
you focused on the fork

and didn’t observe the tablecloth
or the falling waiter.

Although your brain has been
recording everything

in your peripheral vision,

it’s been doing so
below conscious awareness.

When you finally pull yourself
away from the fork,

you think you’ve been here before
because you have,

you just weren’t paying attention.

While all three of these theories
share the common features of déjà vu,

none of them propose to be
the conclusive source

of the phenomenon.

Still, while we wait
for researchers and inventers

to come up with new ways
to capture this fleeting moment,

we can study the moment ourselves.

After all, most studies of déjà vu
are based on first-hand accounts,

so why can’t one be yours?

The next time you get déjà vu,
take a moment to think about it.

Have you been distracted?

Is there a familiar object somewhere?

Is your brain just acting slow?

Or is it something else?

你经历过似曾相识吗?

当一种情况看起来很熟悉时,你就会有一种朦胧的感觉。

餐厅里的一幕
与你记忆中的一模一样。

世界就像您编排的芭蕾舞一样移动

但顺序不能
基于过去的经验,

因为您以前从未在这里吃过饭。

这是你第一次吃蛤蜊

,这是怎么回事?

不幸的是,
对似曾相识没有一个单一的解释。

这种经历是短暂的,
并且在没有通知的情况下发生,

使得科学家几乎不可能记录和研究它。

科学家们不能简单
地坐等它发生在他们身上——

这可能需要数年时间。

它没有物理表现

,在研究中,

它被对象描述
为一种感觉或感觉。

由于缺乏确凿的证据,

多年来一直存在
大量猜测。

自从 Emile Boirac 将 déjà vu

作为法语术语,意思是“已经看到”以来,

已有 40 多种理论
试图解释这种现象。

尽管如此,神经影像学
和认知心理学的最新进展

缩小了前景领域。

让我们来看看当今
更流行的三种理论,每种理论都

使用相同的
餐厅环境。

首先是双重处理。

我们需要采取行动。

让我们和服务员一起
放下一盘盘子。

随着场景的展开,

你的大脑半球处理
一系列信息

:服务员挥舞的手臂、他的求救声、

意大利面的味道。

在几毫秒内,这些信息
迅速通过路径

并被处理成一个瞬间。

大多数时候,
一切都是同步记录的。

然而,该理论

认为,

来自这些途径之一的信息出现轻微延迟时,就会出现似曾相识。

到达时间的差异

导致大脑
将迟到的信息解释

为一个单独的事件。

当它
在已经录制的时刻播放时,

感觉好像它以前发生过,

因为从某种意义上说,它已经发生了。

我们的下一个理论处理
的是过去的混乱,

而不是现在的错误。

这就是全息图理论

,我们将使用那块桌布
来检验它。

当你扫描它的方块时,

一段遥远的记忆
从你的大脑深处游来。

按照理论,

这是因为记忆

是以全息图的形式存储的,

而在全息图中,

你只需要一个片段
就可以看到整个画面。

你的大脑已经将桌布识别为
过去的一块桌布,

可能来自你祖母的房子。

然而
,你的大脑并没有记住你在祖母那里见过它,而是在

没有识别它的情况下唤起了旧的记忆。

这会让你陷入熟悉,
但没有回忆。

尽管您从未
去过这家餐厅,但

您已经看过那块桌布,
但只是没有认出它。

现在,看看这个叉子。

你在关注吗?

我们的最后一个理论是注意力分散

,它指出

当我们的大脑潜意识
地进入一个环境

而我们
被一个特定的物体分散注意力时,就会出现似曾相识。

当我们的注意力回来时,

我们感觉好像我们以前来过这里。

例如,刚才
您专注于叉子

,没有观察桌布
或掉落的服务员。

尽管您的大脑一直在
记录

周边视觉中的所有内容,

但它一直在
有意识地进行记录。

当你最终把自己
从岔路口拉开时,

你认为你以前来过这里,
因为你曾经来过这里,

只是你没有注意。

虽然所有这三种理论
都具有似曾相识的共同特征,

但它们都没有提出成为

这种现象的决定性来源。

尽管如此,当我们
等待研究人员和

发明家想出新的方法
来捕捉这个转瞬即逝的时刻时,

我们可以自己研究这个时刻。

毕竟,大多数似曾相识的研究
都是建立在第一手资料的基础上的,那

为什么不能是你的呢?

下次当你有似曾相识的感觉时,请
花点时间考虑一下。

你分心了吗?

某处有熟悉的物体吗?

你的大脑只是动作缓慢吗?

或者是别的什么?