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Premonition, seizures and memory: the strange phenomenon of déjà vu

<p><strong>It’s a curious French expression for a feeling that many of us have experienced. What does it tell us about the way our minds work?</strong></p> <div class="copy"> <p class="has-drop-cap">It’s fair to say that Dr Anne Cleary, a professor at Colorado State University, never intended to study déjà vu. <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://tedxcsu.com/meet-dr-anne-cleary/" target="_blank">Cleary is a cognitive psychologist</a> and was studying <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://cosmosmagazine.com/health/building-memory-in-the-early-years/" target="_blank">memory</a> when she read Dr Alan Brown’s book <em><a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.routledge.com/The-Deja-Vu-Experience/Brown/p/book/9781138006010" target="_blank">The Déjà Vu Experience</a> </em>in 2004. In his book, Brown called on scientists to evaluate existing theories of déjà vu using current methodologies and models. The challenge he set, according to Cleary, was in “taking decades-old hypotheses from the literature that had never been tested before, and presenting those in terms that scientists could process and understand, as testable hypotheses that had actually never been tested, but could be tested. And he pointed out ways that scientists, using methods available at the time, could approach this”.</p> <p>In her own words, Cleary was inspired.</p> <p>Many of us are familiar with déjà vu – the odd feeling of having experienced something before, when you know differently. Taken from the French language, déjà vu literally translates to “already seen”. While in English we lump all déjà events under one umbrella, the French have a number of categories of “already” experiences. Déjà rêvé, for example, generally describes the feeling of having already dreamed something before experiencing it in waking life, while déjà goûté is the feeling of having already tasted something.</p> <blockquote class="has-text-color has-weekly-blood-red-color"> <p>Taken from the French language, déjà vu literally translates to “already seen”.</p> </blockquote> <p>Being a memory researcher, Cleary was interested in memory-based déjà vu hypotheses. “The source memory framework is the idea that we might find a situation familiar to us, that we also recognise as new, because we’ve experienced it at some point, perhaps in a different context, or just something very similar to it,” she explains. “So what we are experiencing really is a sense of familiarity that is coming from a real memory, but we are failing to call to mind the source of that familiarity.”</p> <p><strong>Using virtual reality to investigate déjà vu</strong></p> <p>In one of Cleary’s earliest déjà vu experiments in 2012, published in <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://bendsawyer.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Cleary-Brown-Sawyer-Nomi-Ajoku-Ryals-2012-Deja-Vue1.pdf" target="_blank"><em>Consciousness and Cognition</em></a>, 24 participants were individually fitted with a virtual-reality visor and navigated through 32 study-scenes, followed by 32 test-scenes. In this experiment, half of the test-scenes were designed to mirror earlier study-scenes in terms of spatial layout – so, for example, a garden scene would be created with hedge and wall placement mirroring that of rubbish placement in a junkyard scene. The navigation path was also identical. While, on average, 41% of mirrored test-scenes were able to be identified by participants, Cleary and colleagues also found that participants were significantly more likely to experience déjà vu when they were “immersed in a scene that shared the same spatial layout as something viewed earlier, but they couldn’t retrieve the memory”.</p> <p>On her decision to use spatial layout to elicit déjà vu, Cleary explains: “There is something special about scenes and places when it comes to human memory, but also when it comes to déjà vu. Research on autobiographical memory and human memory, in general, is starting to point towards the idea that scenes and places, in particular, might play a special role in our ability to remember our past. And that the parts of our brain that are responsible for navigating through spaces might be playing a critical role in our ability to recall our past experiences.”</p> <blockquote class="has-text-color has-weekly-blood-red-color"> <p>“There is something special about scenes and places when it comes to human memory, but also when it comes to déjà vu.”</p> Dr Anne Cleary, Colorado State University</blockquote> <p>Cleary is referring to the 2014 <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/2014/advanced-information/" target="_blank">Nobel Prize-winning</a> discovery of “grid” and “place” cells, believed to be involved in spatial mapping, navigation and memory. The discovery of these cells has also played a part in better understanding the connection between déjà vu and seizures.</p> <p><strong>Illuminating the link between déjà vu and seizures</strong></p> <p>“There is a known link between seizure activity and frequent or chronic déjà vu as part of the seizure aura,” explains Cleary. “In cases where people have this kind of seizure-related déjà vu, it seems to be right near those areas [of the brain] where we think the grid cells are, and those areas of the brain that are responsible for processing our place in space.”</p> <p>But is seizure-related déjà vu the same as the déjà vu most people experience? Interestingly, it seems not.</p> <div class="newsletter-box"> <div id="wpcf7-f6-p173678-o1" class="wpcf7"> <p style="display: none !important;"> </p> <!-- Chimpmail extension by Renzo Johnson --></div> </div> <p>To test this hypothesis, Cleary and colleagues recruited a patient who frequently experiences déjà vu as part of an epileptic condition.</p> <p>“Like a lot of people who have seizure-related déjà vu, he reports that he can tell the difference between when déjà vu is happening because of a seizure, versus when it’s what he would call ‘normal’,” says Cleary. “And so we ran him through our paradigm with the virtual reality scenes to see if he would have déjà vu… and what was really interesting was that he reported having déjà vu, but he said that they were the ‘normal’ kind… and we were recording his brain activity at the time, so we knew he wasn’t having seizures at the time either.”</p> <p>The case study, published in December in <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S152550502100634X" target="_blank"><em>Epilepsy &amp; Behaviour</em></a>, highlights the fact that déjà vu can also be cause for concern. Cleary herself has been contacted by several individuals reaching out for help with sudden chronic déjà vu.</p> <p>“There are medical reasons why people can experience frequent déjà vu,” she says. “People often reach out to me from the general public because they are suddenly having déjà vu very frequently. And that can be an indicator of what’s called focal seizure activity, when it’s happening multiple times a day, or even multiple times a week.”</p> <p><strong>Why does déjà vu sometimes feel like seeing the future?</strong></p> <p>Another curious aspect of déjà vu is its connection with feelings of premonition. Many people report having déjà vu events where they knew what was about to happen, right down to what people would say. Cleary is often approached by individuals wanting to share their experiences. “There were just stories coming out of the woodwork from people who were not at all superstitious, but who definitely felt like they really had this experience and that it was intense,” she says.</p> <blockquote class="has-text-color has-weekly-blood-red-color"> <p>Many people report having déjà vu events where they knew what was about to happen, right down to what people would say.</p> </blockquote> <p>Cleary was intrigued. Using the virtual reality program, Cleary and colleagues ran 74 participants through the study and test-scenes, pausing the navigation before the final turn on test-scenes to ask participants if they had a sense of the direction the last turn would take. That study, published in <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0956797617743018" target="_blank"><em>Psychological Science</em></a>, revealed that while participants’ predictions were no more accurate than chance, they had significantly stronger feelings that they <em>could</em> predict the last turn when experiencing déjà vu. “When people feel like they are having déjà vu,” says Cleary, “they feel quite strongly, very often, that they can predict the next turn, even though they can’t. We’ve since replicated that a number of times now, across a number of different studies. It’s a very robust, rather large effect.”</p> <p>In unpublished research, Cleary and colleagues examined if this predictive bias was also associated with déjà entendu – the feeling of having already heard something, when hearing it for the first time. Using musical puzzlers, in which well-known songs were embedded within classical music, Cleary found the same feelings of premonition when asking participants if they could predict the pitch of the final musical note. “And even more interestingly,” says Cleary, “we made it even more impossible to predict by just randomly assigning [the note] to either the left or right speaker. When people were experiencing déjà entendu for a musical piece, they felt very strongly that they knew the direction that the next sound was going to come from.”</p> <p><strong>How studying déjà vu has helped us understand human memory</strong></p> <p>Going back to where it all started, <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.routledge.com/The-Deja-Vu-Experience/Cleary-Brown/p/book/9780367273200" target="_blank">Cleary is now a co-author on the second edition of Brown’s book: <em>The Déjà Vu Experience</em></a>. “I took him up on his call,” says Cleary, “and so did others. As a result, the book catalysed a lot of the research that has been done since that first edition, leading to a lot of what we now know about déjà vu, that was not known at the time of the first edition of the book. A lot of that work came out of my own lab and my own collaborations with others over the years and a lot of that work continues today”.</p> <blockquote class="has-text-color has-weekly-blood-red-color"> <p>“When déjà vu occurs, suddenly your attention is drawn to your memory, its operation, and how it works.”</p> Dr Anne Cleary, Colorado State University</blockquote> <p>Cleary plans to continue her study in déjà, overlapping sound and virtual scenes to determine the effect on déjà vu experiences. “Most of the time we go through life we’re not paying attention to our memory – we take it for granted. When déjà vu occurs, suddenly your attention is drawn to your memory, its operation, and how it works… As a memory researcher, I think the experience itself is a window into how our memories work.”</p> <!-- Start of tracking content syndication. Please do not remove this section as it allows us to keep track of republished articles --> <img id="cosmos-post-tracker" style="opacity: 0; height: 1px!important; width: 1px!important; border: 0!important; position: absolute!important; z-index: -1!important;" src="https://syndication.cosmosmagazine.com/?id=173678&amp;title=Premonition%2C+seizures+and+memory%3A+the+strange+phenomenon+of+d%C3%A9j%C3%A0+vu" alt="" width="1" height="1" /> <!-- End of tracking content syndication --></div> <div id="contributors"> <p><em><a rel="noopener" href="https://cosmosmagazine.com/health/body-and-mind/science-of-deja-vu/" target="_blank">This article</a> was originally published on <a rel="noopener" href="https://cosmosmagazine.com" target="_blank">Cosmos Magazine</a> and was written by <a rel="noopener" href="https://cosmosmagazine.com/contributor/deborah-johanson" target="_blank">Deborah Johanson</a>. Deborah Johanson is a freelance medical and science writer from Auckland, New Zealand. She holds a PhD and Masters degree in Health Psychology, a Bachelors degree in Health Science, and has a clinical background as a Registered Nurse. While most of her research has involved healthcare robots, Deborah now writes about health, medicine, technology, and science.</em></p> <p><em>Image: Getty Images</em></p> </div>

Mind

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Terri reveals Steve Irwin’s eerie premonition before death

<p>Terri Irwin has revealed she's never overcome her grief of losing 'soulmate' Steve Irwin, after his shock death in September 2006.<br /><br />In the first episode of the new season of ABC's <em>Anh's Brush With Fame</em>, the 53-year-old American-Australian burst into tears as she recalled the heartbreaking moment she found out that he had died.<br /><br />The mother-of-two told host Anh Do she'll never move on from Steve and find another partner, saying: “I'm just lonely for Steve.”<br /><br />“I always felt with Steve, if I hadn't married Steve I wouldn't have gotten married,” Terri said.<br /><br />The pair tied the knot in the US in June 1992, four months after getting engaged.<br /><br />She said when she first met Steve she wasn't even looking for love, but they had an instant connection.<br /><br />“I wasn't even dating, I wasn't even looking. I was 27 years old and figured my life was going to be my work and met Steve and fell instantly in love,” she recalled. <br /><br />Terri described Steve as her ‘soulmate' and said to this day, she isn't interested in meeting anyone new.<br /><br />“I feel that we had that soulmate thing. And in the 10 years since, I haven't dated or even thought about it. Because I'm not afraid to be on my own,” she said.<br /><br />“It's just really hard not having Steve. I'm just lonely for Steve if that makes sense.”<br /><br />Terri also revealed how her late husband may have predicted his life was about to be 'cut short' in the months and weeks leading up to his shock death.<br /><br />“You know he never thought he would have a long life. He just always kind of had this sense that his life would be cut short,” she told Anh.<br /><br />“I remember him saying to me, 'I don’t think I am going to film anymore, I think I am just going to spend time with my kids’,” she said.</p> <p style="text-align: center;">  <br /><iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2FABCTV%2Fvideos%2F10160448114540543%2F&amp;show_text=1&amp;width=476" width="476" height="587" style="border: none; overflow: hidden;" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true" allow="encrypted-media" allowfullscreen="true"></iframe></p> <p>Although it’s been 11 years since Steve was killed by a stingray in a freak accident, Terri spoke about how she’s still grieving.<br /><br />“Grief hits you at the most bizarre times. So I might be talking to biology students and it will remind me of Steve and I will burst into tears.”<br /><br />She added: “You don't ever get over grief. It changes, but you never wake up one morning and go, 'Oh, I'm done with that.'<br /><br />“That was the challenge in the journey after Steve died.”<br /><br />Their children Bindi was eight at the time of her father's death, while Robert was just two years old. <br /><br />Terri spoke about the last time she and the kids saw Steve, recalling it was when he was waving goodbye to them as they caught the plane to Tasmania.<br /><br />“I felt so bad for Robert because he was too little,” Terri said. <br /><br />“He was in his seat belt and fun police [referring to herself] didn't take the seat belt off so he could see his dad and wave goodbye. And that was the last time we saw him,” she said.  <br /><br />Terri said she arrived in Tasmania and was told to call a zoo manager, who told her about Steve's death.<br /><br />“I just remember this<span class="CmCaReT" style="display: none;">�</span> incredible sense of responsibility,” Terri said.<br /><br />“This feeling of overwhelming grief but, it was like, ‘What do I do next?’ So I kind of collected my thoughts and then I had to go out to the car and tell Bindi and Robert, which was really hard.”<br /><br />Terri cried as she remembered how she chose to drive herself and the children to the plane.  <br /><br />She said: “I drove myself, got in the plane and went home. But the thing I didn't expect or understand was just how it affected everyone.<br /><br />“So we got back and it was dark, and we drive into the zoo and there's all this media out front of the zoo.<br /><br />“And I thought, ‘You've done the story. It has been on the five o'clock news. Why are you still here?’ But then no one would have been more surprised than Steve at that, just outpouring of grief and love,” Terri said.  </p>

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Mike Willesee’s plane crash premonition

<p>When veteran journalist Mike Willesee boarded a Cessna plane in Nairobi, Kenya, flying to South Sudan with cameraman Greg Low to film a documentary, he had a strong, extraordinary feeling that the aircraft would crash. It was a premonition.</p> <p>“I couldn’t understand it,” he recounted in an interview with <em>Australian Story</em>. “I had this fight in my own head before I got on the plane. How do I tell Greg that it’s going to crash? I don’t believe in premonitions. Did I believe it was going to crash? Absolutely.”</p> <p>Shortly after take-off – during a tropical downpour, mind you – the plane started to experience engine issues.</p> <p>“When it stalled, and it stopped for this one excruciating second and then started to spiral and go down, the only thought I could get out of my head was, ‘I was right’, which is pretty freaky.”</p> <p>“I said my first prayer to a God who I didn’t understand and whose existence I was quite unsure of.”</p> <p>After crashing into the ground, the pilot and two other passengers fled the smoking wreckage, leaving Willesee and Low still strapped to their seats. Willesee was able to unbuckle himself, but Low remained stuck</p> <p>“Greg’s seat buckle was jammed because he had his camera on his lap and we thought the plane would explode and burn because of the noise and incredible amount of smoke. So I ran back into the plane and Greg freed himself as I got in and we got out.”</p> <p>Willesee, who was inducted into the Australian Media Hall of Fame on Friday, says the experience renewed his childhood Catholic faith. “It still took me I think maybe two years, for me to actually say there is a God,” he said.</p> <p>Tell us in the comments below, have you ever had a premonition? Did it come true?</p> <p><em>Image credit: Britta Campion/The Australian.</em></p>

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