déjà vu, a sense that one has experienced a situation before. The feeling of déjà vu is often fleeting, lasting only a few seconds or minutes, though individuals’ reactions to the sensation may linger for some time.
Most people experience déjà vu on occasion, especially young adults. It is often triggered by sights, sounds, or smells. It can also occur to those who experience fatigue or stress, which can affect short and long-term memories. While feelings of familiarity related to routine activities, such as driving to work or taking a daily run in the park, are normal, episodes of déjà vu have no associated prior experiences or recallable memories. The sensation could be called a “hallucination” of familiarity; some theorists have interpreted the experience as being based on the reactivation of old memory traces by stimuli resembling those experienced in the past. Often the person experiencing déjà vu realizes that the sensation is not logical under the circumstances and may attribute it to a past life or other mystical experience.
Scientists are uncertain of the exact cause of déjà vu, but some have theorized that it may be associated with the temporal lobe of the brain, where memories are stored. The temporal lobe aids with recalling words, understanding language and emotions, and remembering faces and locations. Déjà vu may be related to a disruption of communication between the temporal lobe and the hippocampus, a part of the brain that lies within the temporal lobe and is responsible for storing short-term memories. This idea—that the cause of déjà vu is associated with the temporal lobe—may be supported by the experiences of people with temporal lobe epilepsy. Seizures in the temporal lobe result in the misfiring of nerve cells, causing unexplained sensory experiences in taste, smell, or hearing. People with temporal lobe epilepsy often experience déjà vu before a seizure. The feeling of déjà vu does not mean that a person is having a seizure, however.
In individuals whose déjà vu is not caused by a medical condition, there are a number of theories about the causes of the phenomenon. One possible cause of déjà vu stems from inattentiveness. When someone is not paying full attention in a situation, becomes distracted, and then returns to the situation with full attention, a feeling of having a prior experience of that situation might occur. For example, a person who is absentmindedly folding laundry and then is interrupted by a phone call might experience a feeling of déjà vu when they return to folding laundry. The déjà vu phenomenon could also be attributed partly to a forgotten memory. When someone has done something before but has forgotten the incident, the experience of doing the same thing again may feel familiar to them without having an explicit memory associated with it.
Déjà vu may also be caused by a minor processing error in the nervous system, such as when two cognitive processes that normally work in tandem become out of sync. For example, a retrieval cue (stimulus that helps with the recall process) typically triggers access to a memory, causing the brain to recognize an experience as being familiar. Sometimes the sense of familiarity is triggered without retrieval of an associated memory, however, leading to the experience of déjà vu. Additionally, non-epileptic temporal lobe seizures or delays in transmission between the sense organs and the brain can also cause a feeling of déjà vu. This delay in the transmission of information can lead to a feeling that the information being received is old and that the events have already happened in the past.