Webmost people experience déjà vu with no adverse health effects.

Webit’s thought to be very common, having occurred in between 30 and 96 percent of the population, and usually lasts only seconds.

It can happen to healthy people but can also signify epilepsy or dementia.

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But there’s much it could teach us about the brain and memory.

While scientists don’t know.

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Webdéjà vu is a sense of having already seen something you're currently seeing or experiencing—coupled with knowing you haven’t actually seen it, which is why it.

Webdéjà vu happens when there’s a miscommunication between two parts of your brain.

Websome workers who signed up for dailypay access to their employer payments took to social media to express frustration with being unable to tap their funds.

Webscientists are still untangling why we get deja vu.

It can be triggered by fatigue.

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In rare cases, déjà vu can be a sign of a neurological disorder.

In general, déjà vu is a phenomenon in which a person suddenly feels a sense of familiarity with a present situation, even though they know.

What is deja vu, and what’s happening in the brain when we feel it?

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Webyou have probably experienced déjà vu — the feeling that a situation or event happening now is one you’ve experienced before.

Individuals with epilepsy often.