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That Deja Vu Happens Because Your Mind Pick up the Image to Quickly to make it look like you seen it before

2006-08-06 13:12:00 · 9 answers · asked by 5445 1 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

9 answers

Step one would be to figure out what it is, and state it intelligibly, so other people know what it is. (What you wrote is not clear.)

I recently read an article on a recent study on Deja Vu on www.newscientist.com -- you might want to do a search there, to see what some people who are actually studying the phenomenon say. (It has something to do with a mess-up in recognition -- the feeling of recognition is being falsely triggered, or something.)

2006-08-06 13:20:54 · answer #1 · answered by tehabwa 7 · 0 0

"I believe in DE JA VUE so i think your theory if you could spell it..."

I love irony!

Here is an explanation of deja vu:

"One of the most important aspects of your dealings with the world concerns time. Everything that happens to you is first laid down in the hippocampus (region of the brain) as a story set in time, "right now... a little while ago... earlier than that..." You remember, for instance, that you read these words more recently than the ones above. The hippocampus gives everything a time tag.
The time tagging is essential. If you had no idea what order things were happening, it would be like watching a film in which the frames have been assembled at random. It would completely ruin your day. In face the idea of 'day' would be meaningless. The sun would be dodging all over the place in your memory. Your experience of each moment of your life is therefore fixed in a mental time chart.
Simultaneously you are comparing each new experience to memories and expectations already stored in the brain. If your experience of a particular moment, as it travels forward to be edited into the film, fails to pick up a time tag, the cortex assumes that since it doesn't fit into the present, it must be from the memory section - it must belong somewhere in the past. Where in the past it can't say, so deja vu experiences have fuzzy histories."

2006-08-06 21:32:31 · answer #2 · answered by Steve S 4 · 0 0

Go to school for another 10 years.

2006-08-07 01:38:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

First and foremost, it's not a theory. It's called hypothesis. When you test hypothesis through scientific method and it works out through that proof to be valid, then it's theory.

2006-08-06 22:15:44 · answer #4 · answered by Ice 6 · 0 0

need more detail but try to ove yor theory by testin multiple subjects and get an average repsone..
btw i acn spell to lay 2...

2006-08-06 20:17:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You cannot ever prove a theory. You can disprove one, but never prove one.

2006-08-06 21:11:20 · answer #6 · answered by Chris S 1 · 0 0

I believe in de ja vue so i think your theory if you could spell it is jack

2006-08-06 20:16:00 · answer #7 · answered by Sarah 2 · 0 0

Its funny you mention that and since I already remember answering your question, cheers!

2006-08-06 20:17:58 · answer #8 · answered by The Stranger 3 · 0 0

huh?

2006-08-06 20:14:06 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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