Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3051887 Epilepsy & Behavior Case Reports 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundDéjà vu (DV, from French déjà vu — “already seen”) is an aberration of psychic activity associated with transitory erroneous perception of novel circumstances, objects, or people as already known.ObjectiveThis study aimed to record the EEG pattern of déjà vu.MethodsThe subjects participated in a survey concerning déjà vu characteristics and underwent ambulatory EEG monitoring (12–16 h).ResultsIn patients with epilepsy, DV episodes began with polyspike activity in the right temporal lobe region and, in some cases, ended with slow-wave theta–delta activity over the right hemisphere. There were no epileptic discharges in healthy respondents during DV.ConclusionTwo types of déjà vu are suggested to exist: “pathological-epileptic” déjà vu, characteristic of patients with epilepsy and equivalent to an epileptic seizure, and “nonpathological-nonepileptic” déjà vu, which is characteristic of healthy people and psychological phenomenon.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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