Déjàvu: The past ... "... psychologist thinks that deja vu is a glimpse of the past life, there was a similar incident in this case, and you may die between cases" (2) Deja Vu The mysterious nature of it Although it is in experience itself, it is in its definition. The only unity of the truth is a direct French translation - "I have already seen it." Generally, this phenomenon can be summarized as going through the present past. This is an incredible feeling or fantasy that I have ever experienced, experienced before. (3) The experience of deja vu is to let people get lost and ask for explanation, it's incomprehensible.
The familiar feeling is called deja vu, it is a Frenchman who was already seen. According to the survey, two out of two in three people have experienced a certain period of life or someone else. Indeed, we know that the frequency of deja vu decreases with age. So, what caused deja vu? Well ... let's see. I am as excited as you. Several studies have shown that in epileptic patients acquaintance often occurs before a stroke. Since epilepsy is related to the temporal lobe of the brain, we can conclude that deja vu is related to the temporal lobe. For a healthy person, it can be thought of as a small stroke that stops before it causes further damage.
Déjàvu, we call it. When your eyes say something to you, your feelings will say different things to you: "I was here before" This leads to people get used to the rationalization of the past memories can do. But it is not. Déjàvu is a failure to separate and the brain has failed to guarantee that new memories do not prevent old memories. This situation does not occur frequently. Assuming an average life expectancy of 70 years, we experienced about 2,207,520,000 seconds in the lifetime. More than 2 billion seconds We will have memories during this time. Usually it is several seconds. We can use the hippocampus to save millions of new memories, but in rare cases it may be unexpectedly open.
This is not the first time this news has appeared. According to a survey in 2010, those who remember their dreams well had more experiences they had met before. There are even nouns that dream of deja vu. Like dejavu, French says "I had been dreaming of it before." About 86% of the college students studied have reported that they remembered the events that they learned from their own dreams. A fancy acquaintance researcher at Colorado State University and a cognitive psychologist Anne Clay think that there is a possibility that it can happen when dreaming of what he has experienced, but he will dream, not the event itself. Now I want to know if I really stealed a car or I dreamed. (just kidding!)