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Jamais Vu

When the familiar becomes disturbingly unfamiliar

The Opposite of Déjà Vu

You know déjà vu — that eerie feeling when something unfamiliar seems strangely familiar. But have you experienced its opposite?

Jamais vu (French for "never seen") is when something perfectly familiar suddenly feels alien, unknown, or strange — like a word you've used thousands of times suddenly looking like it can't possibly be a real word.

In 2023, researchers won an Ig Nobel Prize for demonstrating that simply repeating a common word can induce jamais vu in about two-thirds of people within 30 repetitions.

Let's see if we can trigger it in you.

Choose a Common Word

Select a word you know extremely well. The more familiar, the more unsettling the jamais vu effect will be.

DOOR ~200 uses/day
THE Most common word
HAND ~100 uses/day
CHAIR Concrete object
FACE ~80 uses/day
TREE Visual, concrete
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WORD
Repetitions: 0

Type the word repeatedly. Press Enter after each repetition.

Your Jamais Vu Experience

Word tested: -
Total repetitions: -
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Jamais vu experienced? -

How You Compare

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What Happened?

Déjà Vu

Unfamiliar → Feels familiar

Brain falsely signals recognition for novel stimuli. Often triggered by similarity to past experiences.

Jamais Vu

Familiar → Feels unfamiliar

Brain loses connection between form and meaning through repetitive activation. A "reality check" mechanism.

The Science of Jamais Vu

When you repeat a word, multiple brain systems are involved:

  • Motor processing: Your fingers type the same pattern
  • Visual processing: Your eyes see the same letters
  • Semantic processing: Your brain retrieves the meaning

But neural systems fatigue. With each repetition, it takes more energy for neurons to fire. Eventually, the connection between the word's form (how it looks/sounds) and its meaning temporarily weakens.

The result: you're staring at something you've known your whole life, but it suddenly looks like random symbols. The familiar becomes alien.

Researchers believe jamais vu serves a purpose: it's a "snap out of it" signal. When processing becomes too automatic, too fluent, the feeling of unreality interrupts you — a reality check to ensure you're not stuck in mindless repetition.

References: Moulin, C. J. A., & O'Connor, A. R. (2023). "The the the the induction of jamais vu in the laboratory: word alienation and semantic satiation." Memory, Ig Nobel Prize Winner. See also: Semantic satiation research by Leon James (1962).