Déjà vu is a normal neurological phenomenon caused by a temporary misalignment between the brain's two parallel memory systems: one that stores facts and events, and another that generates familiarity signals. When the familiarity signal fires prematurely—about half a second before the brain can confirm a real memory match—the brain detects this error, creating the sensation of having experienced the current moment before. This demonstrates that déjà vu is actually a sign of proper brain function, not a glitch or psychic ability.
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Why Do We Get Déjà Vu? The Science Explained! #why #shortsAñadido:
Why do we get [music] deja vu? Turns out it has nothing to do with psychic powers. Your brain has two memory systems running in parallel. One stores [music] facts and events. The other handles familiarity. That quiet signal that says, "I've seen [music] this before."
Normally, these two systems sync perfectly.
But sometimes the familiarity signal fires [music] a half second too early before your brain can confirm there's no real matching memory. Here's the wild bit. Deja vu is actually [music] a sign your brain is working correctly.
It detects the error. Got a question hiding in plain sight? Drop it in the [music] comments. The best ones become the next short.
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