Dopplesnap

[DOP-ul-snap]

Definition

  1. (noun) The uncanny moment when you encounter someone who looks strikingly similar to a person you know, causing a brief moment of confusion and a double-take. It’s that split-second of disorientation followed by the realization that you’re looking at a doppelganger, not the person you initially thought.

Example

Walking down the street, Maria experienced a major dopplesnap when she saw someone who looked exactly like her boss, only to realize it was a complete stranger.

Fun Fact

The word “dopplesnap” combines “dopple-” from “doppelganger” (a look-alike or double of a person) with “snap,” suggesting a quick, sudden realization. This phenomenon has roots in how our brains process facial recognition. A study published in the journal “Nature Neuroscience” found that this area can sometimes be overly sensitive, leading to false positives where we think we recognize someone familiar in a stranger’s face. This explains why dopplesnaps can feel so vivid and convincing, even if only for a moment. Interestingly, the study also found that these misidentifications are more likely to occur with faces of the same ethnicity as the observer, a phenomenon known as the “other-race effect” in facial recognition.