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Deja Vu

All articles tagged with #deja vu

Olivia Rodrigo's Songbook, Ranked: From Drivers License to Deep Cuts
music15 days ago

Olivia Rodrigo's Songbook, Ranked: From Drivers License to Deep Cuts

Rolling Stone ranks every officially released Olivia Rodrigo track across Sour, Guts, and her new album You Seem Pretty Sad For a Girl So In Love (including soundtrack tunes, bonus tracks, and B-sides). The current top picks crown ‘Deja Vu’ at No. 1 and ‘Driver’s License’ at No. 2, with praise for Olivia’s versatile voice and a catalog that moves from pop-punk anthems to intimate piano ballads.

Olivia Rodrigo deflects Taylor Swift credit drama, stays focused on making music
entertainment1 month ago

Olivia Rodrigo deflects Taylor Swift credit drama, stays focused on making music

In a New York Times Popcast interview, Olivia Rodrigo says there’s no frost with Taylor Swift and that she’d rather focus on making songs she loves and being kind to others than dwell on past songwriting-credit drama. The piece revisits the Deja Vu credit saga, noting Swift and Jack Antonoff were added as co-writers after the release due to similarities with Swift’s Cruel Summer, and touches on earlier debates around Sour’s tracks. It also highlights Rodrigo’s continued collaborations and friendships in the industry as she promotes her upcoming album.

"Unveiling 4 Novel Types of Déjà Vu: Insights from a Psychologist"
psychology2 years ago

"Unveiling 4 Novel Types of Déjà Vu: Insights from a Psychologist"

Psychologists have identified four distinct types of déjà vu experiences: jamais vu, where familiar situations feel unfamiliar; presque vu, the frustrating feeling of almost recalling something; déjà rêvé, the sensation of experiencing a current situation that feels like a memory from a dream; and déjà vécu, the feeling of reliving a past experience in vivid detail. These phenomena continue to baffle researchers, highlighting the mysterious nature of human cognition and perception.

Déjà Vu: Unraveling the Intriguing Puzzle
science2 years ago

Déjà Vu: Unraveling the Intriguing Puzzle

Déjà vu, the eerie feeling of reliving an experience, has intrigued scientists for years. Recent research suggests that déjà vu can be triggered by spatial similarities between a new scene and an unrecalled memory. Studies using virtual reality have shown that when people are placed in scenes with the same spatial arrangement as a previous scene they viewed but didn't recall, déjà vu is more likely to occur. While spatial resemblance is one contributing factor to déjà vu, there are likely many other factors at play in this mysterious phenomenon.

Cracking the Code of Déjà Vu: Insights from a Psychologist
psychology2 years ago

Cracking the Code of Déjà Vu: Insights from a Psychologist

Déjà vu, the eerie feeling of familiarity, is a phenomenon that transcends visual recognition and spans various encounters. It is not a straightforward memory recall but operates in the realm of the 'as if,' where the present moment feels like it has unfolded previously. Psychologists offer diverse theories to explain déjà vu, including temporal lobe dysfunction, faulty tape recorder hypothesis, psychodynamic perspectives, and even parapsychological concepts. However, no single theory captures the complexity of déjà vu, leaving it as an enigma that challenges our understanding of memory, perception, and the human mind.

The Power of Déjà vu: Unlocking the Past for Human Survival
science-and-technology2 years ago

The Power of Déjà vu: Unlocking the Past for Human Survival

Déjà vu, the eerie sense of experiencing something new that has been experienced before, has long puzzled scientists and philosophers. Recent research suggests that déjà vu may be a mechanism for focusing attention and a possible adaptive mechanism for survival. Studies have shown that déjà vu is most commonly triggered by scenes, indicating the importance of scene-processing mechanisms in human memory. The use of virtual reality (VR) has allowed researchers to recreate and study the phenomenon, shedding light on the illusory sense of prediction and postdiction associated with déjà vu. While the exact mechanisms behind déjà vu are still not fully understood, these findings provide valuable insights into the nature of human memory and perception.

"The Bizarre Phenomenon That Distorts Reality and How You Can Control It"
neuroscience2 years ago

"The Bizarre Phenomenon That Distorts Reality and How You Can Control It"

Researchers have been investigating the phenomenon of jamais vu, the opposite of déjà vu, where something familiar feels unreal or novel. In a lab setting, participants were asked to repeatedly write the same word, and 70% of them stopped because things began to feel strange or jamais vu. The study suggests that jamais vu serves as a signal that something has become too automatic or repetitive, helping us "snap out" of our current processing and providing a reality check.