Feeling Deja Vu?

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Abcinthia

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In Psychology we learnt that déjà vu is to do with sensory memory, short term and long term memory overlaps.

I have my notes on it upstairs but Wikipedia describes it quite well:

The most likely explanation of déjà vu is not that it is an act of "precognition" or "prophecy," but rather that it is an anomaly of memory, giving the impression that an experience is "being recalled." This explanation is substantiated by the fact that the sense of "recollection" at the time is strong in most cases, but that the circumstances of the "previous" experience (when, where, and how the earlier experience occurred) are quite uncertain. Likewise, as time passes, subjects can exhibit a strong recollection of having the "unsettling" experience of déjà vu itself, but little or no recollection of the specifics of the event(s) or circumstance(s) they were "remembering" when they had the déjà vu experience. In particular, this may result from an overlap between the neurological systems responsible for short-term memory and those responsible for long-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the past). The events would be stored into memory before the conscious part of the brain even receives the information and processes it
 
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BadBoy@TheWheel

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I actually read a study that suggested it was more of recognizing a situation in your awake time that assimilated a situation during REM sleep. WFK?
 
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