The Intriguing Puzzle of Déjà Vu
By ANNE CLEARY, COLORADO STATE
UNIVERSITY
Have you ever had that weird feeling that you’ve experienced the same exact situation before, even though that’s impossible? Sometimes it can even seem like you’re reliving something that already happened.
This
phenomenon, known as déjà vu,
has puzzled philosophers, neurologists,
and writers for
a very long time.
Starting in the late 1800s, many theories began to emerge regarding what might cause déjà vu, which means “already seen” in French.
People thought maybe it stemmed from mental
dysfunction or perhaps a type of brain problem. Or maybe it was a temporary
hiccup in the otherwise normal operation of human memory. However, the topic
did not reach the realm of science until quite recently.
Moving From the Paranormal to the Scientific
Early in this millennium, a scientist named Alan Brown decided to conduct a review of everything researchers had written about déjà vu until that point. Much of what he could find had a paranormal flavor, having to do with the supernatural – things like past lives or psychic abilities.
But he also found studies that surveyed
regular people about their déjà vu experiences. From all these papers, Brown
was able to glean some basic findings on the déjà vu phenomenon.
For example, Brown determined that roughly two-thirds of people experience déjà vu at some point in their lives. He determined that the most common trigger of déjà vu is a scene or place, and the next most common trigger is a conversation.
He also reported on hints
throughout a century or so of medical literature of a possible association
between déjà vu and some types of seizure activity in the brain.
Brown’s review brought the topic of déjà vu
into the realm of more mainstream science, because it appeared in both a
scientific journal that scientists who study cognition tend to read, and
also in a book aimed
at scientists. His work served as a catalyst for scientists to design
experiments to investigate déjà vu.
Testing Déjà Vu in the Psychology Lab
Prompted by Brown’s work, my own research team began conducting experiments aimed at testing hypotheses about possible mechanisms of déjà vu.
We investigated a near
century-old hypothesis that suggested déjà vu can happen
when there’s a spatial resemblance between a current scene and an unrecalled
scene in your memory. Psychologists called this the Gestalt familiarity
hypothesis.
For example, imagine you’re passing the nursing station in a hospital unit on your way to visit a sick friend. Although you’ve never been to this hospital before, you are struck with a feeling that you have.
The underlying cause for this experience of déjà vu could be that the
layout of the scene, including the placement of the furniture and the
particular objects within the space, have the same layout as a different scene
that you did experience in the past.
Maybe the way the nursing station is situated – the furniture, the items on the counter, the way it connects to the corners of the hallway – is the same as how a set of welcome tables was arranged relative to signs and furniture in a hallway at the entrance to a school event you attended a year earlier.
According to the Gestalt familiarity hypothesis,
if that previous situation with a similar layout to the current one doesn’t
come to mind, you might be left only with a strong feeling of familiarity for the
current one.
To investigate this idea in the laboratory, my team used virtual reality to place people within scenes. That way we could manipulate the environments people found themselves in – some scenes shared the same spatial layout while otherwise being distinct.
As predicted, déjà vu was more likely to happen when
people were in a scene that contained the same spatial arrangement of elements
as an earlier scene they viewed but didn’t recall.
This research suggests that one contributing factor to déjà vu can be spatial resemblance of a new scene to one in memory that fails to be consciously called to mind at the moment. However, it does not mean that spatial resemblance is the only cause of déjà vu.
Very likely, many
factors can contribute to what makes a scene or a situation feel familiar. More
research is underway to investigate additional possible factors at play in this
mysterious phenomenon.