Neuroscience & Neurology
Ah, Looks Familiar! Deja Vu and the Dentate Gyrus
The human brain recognizes “patterns” as a natural way of looking at places and things. The feeling of deja vu is the result of such a pattern match; although we might not actually have been in a similar situation, the brain thinks it has, and produces a feeling of familiarity.
New research published online in Science reveals that specific neuronal pathways in the learning and memory center of our brain, the hippocampus, is crucial for rapidly “comparing” two scenarios based on visual cues, thus identifying similar contexts. In turn, this can lead to the feeling of familiarity we often get in odd places and circumstances, termed deja vu.
Surveys reveal that up to 70 percent of the population have experienced a deja vu at some point in their lives — and has also been described as a prominent symptom of temporal lobe epilepsy. It was the focal point in the novel by Marcel Proust, Remembrance of Things Past. The narrator recalls his past life through four moments of dega vu that involved complex experiences involving memories of smells and sounds from childhood, apart from visual memory.
The above-mentioned research project, carried out jointly by neuroscientists at MIT, UCLA, and Harvard, identified the signaling protein NMDA in the granule cells of the dentate gyrus in the hippocampus of mice. It is the key to rapid memory separation of two places, that serve as tools for discriminating two environments and thus crucial to learning. In some situations of similarity when the brain is not able to distinguish the two, it can also lead to the experiences of deja vu.
The Nobel laureate Prof. Susumu Tonegawa, in whose laboratory the study on mutant mice is being carried out, points out that the brain needs fine tuning in order to find out the unique cues which are crucial to distinguishing between familiar environments, to overcome the feeling of deja vu. The study is crucial for a better understanding of a host of disorders related to memory and learning, where the brain loses it ability to distinguish between similar environment, based on analysis of the unique features of each. It may also be impaired in some elderly patients with presumed changes in the hippocampus.
Deja vu then, could largely be due to a “confused” dentate gyrus.
Reference:
McHugh T J, Jones M W, Tonegawa S et al. Dentate Gyrus NMDA Receptors Mediate Rapid Pattern Separation in the Hippocampal Network. Science. 6 July 2007.
Related Articles
3 Comments
Fascinating study! Thanks for the information!
Trackbacks
Leave a Reply
Friday, October 10, 2008
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- The Bipolar Trend
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Is War A Psychosis?
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- Integrating Schizophrenia Management
- Health Care and Politics I - The Republicans
- Brain Blogging, Fortieth Edition
- China’s Tainted Reputation
- The Silent Epidemic of Health Illiteracy
- Managed Care Kills a Provider’s Reputation
- Writing Away Your Worries
- Sleep Deprivation, Behavior, and the Young
- Preventative Care in Medicine
- Cheating Husbands - What His Genes Tell Us
- Reduced Empathy Following Traumatic Brain Injury
- Craniosacral Therapy – Healing Through Touch
- Brain Blogging, Thirty-Ninth Edition
- Are Doctors Super Human?
- Taking Care of Those Who Take Care of Us
- Water - How Much is Too Much?
- Involving Physicians in Military Interrogations
- What Does Your iPod Say About You?
- HIPAA Doesn’t Exist For Doctors
- Is the Primary Care Physician Becoming Extinct?
- George Huntington and the Disease Bearing His Name
- Let's think about John McCain's plan from the prospective of a lower income indi...
- .Who is really paying health insurance aka desease care in America.
Folks lets ...
- Thank you for featuring my article about MYTH AND REALITY OF SHOCK TREATMENT...
- Thank you for publishing my article "BEWARE, YOUR BRAIN IS BEING HACKED"...
- Thank you for this excellent, succint article, I am one of many struggling with ...
- "Being vegetarian is also better for the environment" I am sure it is, how about...
- I belong to the PETA group, People eat tasty animals. :)...
- you people go ahead and eat your carrots, more meat for me. :)...
- While I agree providers are going non par because of low reimbursements, I do no...
- Our perceptions, emotions, and reactions to the world around us begin at birth, ...
- Those measure that have been used have been formulated by insurance companies ai...
- Obviously, you've never had to work with lawyers who are dealing with/appealing ...
- For depression, I recommend that one sees a counsellor to ascertain the source o...
- simple...those things do really happen. End....
- doctors are still normal people you know......
- so...does it mean that people with Type 2 Diabetes Millitus are less anxious and...
- Sleep deprivation is a common lack of the required amount of sleep. This may ari...
- The medical tourist usually chooses to have the surgery or procedure done overse...
- Are any tests to be conducted in the Tyler, TX area?...
- Links (between insomnia and other 'problems') are NOT causal correlates, they ar...
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
Neuroscience & Neurology
September 12, 2008 | 1 Comment | By Jared Tanner, MS
Physiological Effects of Alcohol Consumption
More In Neuroscience & Neurology
- A Baby’s Smile - Mom’s Natural High
- When “Alternative” Isn’t Anymore - The Ketogenic Diet in Epilepsy
- Stroke’s Little Known Complication - Pain
- Can Drug Therapy Prevent Parkinson’s Disease?
- Is Seeing Into the Future More Than an Optical Illusion?
Neuroscience & Neurology
Opinion
October 07, 2008 | 0 Comments | By J. R. White
China’s Tainted Reputation
More In Opinion
- HIPAA Doesn’t Exist For Doctors
- Some Funny Stories From the Trenches
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Gift of Life - Part 2
- Are Drug Reps Really Necessary?
Opinion
Psychiatry & Psychology
October 01, 2008 | 2 Comments | By RD, MD
Sleep Deprivation, Behavior, and the Young
More In Psychiatry & Psychology
- Cheating Husbands - What His Genes Tell Us
- Reduced Empathy Following Traumatic Brain Injury
- What Does Your iPod Say About You?
- Antipsychotics May Decrease the Risk of Suicide
- Planning for Postnatal Depression



A nice blog. Best Wishes from Malaysia.
Zakaria Mohamad