Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Deja Vu
22 Answers
I'm not sure if that's the correct spelling but does any one know how it works? If you don't I'll let you know!!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.D�j� vu works through paramnesia, a temporary time-dissociation. The incident being lived through for the first time is not related by the mind to the present, but somehow to the past. When the mind grasps that it is actually happening now, it seems to decide that this is actually the second occasion. It's rather like when we think of someone for the first time in years and who do we bump into that very morning? Thinking of them didn't make them magically appear...coincidence did. Such mental weirdnesses seem all very eerie, but they're quite straightforward really.
The experience of D�j� Vu occurs when your brain short-circuits. You're walking down the street and you see an old man trip on the curbing and fall into the road. Your brain tells you that you have been here and seen this before, what has actually happened is this.
You effectively have three memory storage areas of the brain, SHORT TERM, usually what is happening right now. MEDIUM TERM, what has happened will be kept for a period of time until it is sorted and written to, LONG TERM memory, things that you experience during your day to day mulling around are sorted while you dream and either stored in your long term memory or discarded.
When you experience D�j� vu your brain is writing what is happening to your short term memory, at the same instance a short circuit occurs and the experience is also written to the long term memory. Because you short term memory constantly references your long term memory when things happen, (this is how we now that red traffic lights mean go and that green traffic lights mean stop!!!!) Your brain thinks that you have experienced the same situation in every detail before.
That's the technical explanation for you, So effectively Quizmonster was the closest!!
Dear Cetti, if you click http://www.htmlgoodies.com/primers/basics.html
a link will take you to a website that outlines the basic html procedures for producing bold print, italics, underlinings, paragraphs etc. Once at the site, just click on each of the "Primer" headings in turn and do the exercises outlined. It's really quite easy.
PS I'll want to see an 'appropriate' response here...ie one with italics in it at the very least! (Oh, and you have to vow never to overdo it with the new skills.)
'ello :o) there are a number of theories behind deja vous; some from bio-psychology like quizmonsters answers and some cognitive based like mylo's. Similar to Mylo's answer i have also studied another psychology based one where deja vous experiences occur due to memory scenes in our Long term memory known as schema's. Schema's are an internal representation of a particular event. For example each time we have caught the train our LTM builds up on the the memory of catching a train. We refer to this schema when catching the train in future so that we can make sense of the experience and know what to expect etc.The feeling of Deja vous might occur next time we were are on the train for example when we are totally relaxed and not referring to our schema, then all of a sudden our brain jumps into action and makes a connection with the 'train schema' and we have the creepy feelin of being there before with the same people, noises etc but it is simply our schemata has become scrambled in our relaxed moment and it is only until we we are aware of this weird feeling that our brain is able to tell us that it is not possible and its because our schema is playing up! Well it makes some sorta sense to me ... i guess i wouldn't make a lecturer! lol T x
The problem with the "week" idea, Cetti, is that this question will have long disappeared by then. How about addressing something to me directly in the 'Sayings' category?
Alternatively, for italic, put a left-arrow (that's one of these <) followed by the letter i (for italic) followed by a right arrow (that's one of these >). Then put the word/phrase to be italicised (let's say that's Cetti) then put another left arrow followed by a slash (that's /) followed by another letter i followed by another right arrow. And voil�...you should have an italicised Cetti! Go on, give it a go right here and now.