Tagged with memory

ExpliKate: Feels like you’ve read this somewhere before…

By Kate Hakala

You head to a bar one night in an area that’s completely foreign to you, in a state you’ve never visited. As you walk in, you decide to get a martini and order from the barkeep. Then you turn around and notice, standing in the corner, a drag queen in a pink leotard holding a fiddle. Suddenly, you get a shiver done your spine, as this all seems overwhelmingly familiar. Too familiar. Unless this is one of those rare jet-setting drag queen troubadours, there’s no way this could have happened before. But you swear it has. You, my friend, have a major case of déjà vu.

What is déjà vu? Hint: It’s not just your favorite Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young album. Déjà vu is essentially an experience where there is an unexplainable sense of recognition, but with no real pretext or awareness for this genuine yet indescribable feeling. The term was first coined by French psychic Émile Boirac and literally means “already seen.”  Since it was first talked about in the 1800s, neurobiologists have worked hard to contend with this ephemeral topic; there seems to be over fifty theories floating around about the cause of déjà vu.  It’s not just a phenomenon for Frenchies. What makes déjà vu such a spooky, unsettling occurrence is that it can’t be verified or observed objectively, but it still remains a common and almost universally reported experience.

Don’t fret. There are some things about déjà vu that we do know for certain. About 70% of the population has reported experiencing it at least once, but in many cases multiple times in their life.

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Newscaster Katie McGee interviews Marilu Henner about her freakishly good memory

Katie McGee and Marilu Henner talk memory

Last night, entertainment reporter Katie McGee of CBS2 News in New York sat down with actress Marilu Henner to talk about a highly unusual medical condition. Henner apparently has what is called a Highly Superior Auto-Biographical Memory, or H-SAM. The “Taxi” actress is one of only about a dozen people in the United States with this gift/curse which allows her to remember every day with an insane level of detail.

“You say April 3, 1992 and all of a sudden the whole week starts presenting itself to me,” Henner tells McGee in the interview. “That was a Friday and I was in New York, actually. Early that week, on Monday the 30th, I had won $1,760 at a winner-take-all Academy Awards pool. It was a clean sweep of the Oscars, ‘Silence Of The Lambs’, Jodie Foster.”

In the interview, Henner explains a strange fact: it’s not that you lose and/or forget memories, it’s more like you misplace them.

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