One of the Cognitive ghosts discussed in the The Rest Is Science episode “Cognitive Ghosts”.
What it is
Déjà vu (French for “already seen”) is the fleeting, uncanny sense that a brand-new situation has happened before — “wait, have we been here already?” — even when you know rationally that you haven’t. It’s one of the most common cognitive ghosts: most people experience it occasionally, and it’s most frequent in young adults.
What’s happening in the brain
The episode frames déjà vu not as a memory glitch but as a conflict-monitoring glitch. The leading modern theory (associated with Akira O’Connor at St Andrews) is that déjà vu is the feeling of the brain checking and correcting itself: a region of the frontal cortex notices a clash between a false signal of familiarity and the factual knowledge that the scene is new, and that error-resolution process is what we consciously experience. In other words, déjà vu may be a sign your memory system is working well — it caught the mistake.
A complementary idea is Gestalt familiarity: a new scene whose spatial layout resembles one you’ve seen before can trigger familiarity without you being able to place the source.
References from the show
- The hosts mention a lab study with a title along the lines of “Awareness of Novelty for Strangely Familiar Words” — a paradigm (in the tradition of Anne Cleary’s work at Colorado State) that artificially induces déjà-vu-like familiarity for words that were never actually presented.
- Key takeaway quoted: déjà vu is “your brain glitching, essentially saying, wait, no, have we been here before?”
Links
Related
- Jamais vu — the mirror image: familiar things turning strange
- Presque vu — the related “almost remembering” feeling
- Déjà rêvé — “already dreamed”, a dream-flavoured cousin
- Cognitive ghosts