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Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories

πŸ“„ Original study β†—
Thonnard, Marie, Charland-Verville, Vanessa, Bredart, Serge, Dehon, Hedwige, Ledoux, Didier, Laureys, Steven, Vanhaudenhuyse, Audrey β€’ 2013 Modern Era β€’ nde

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Plain English Summary

Here's a wild finding: memories of near-death experiences aren't just vivid β€” they're richer and more detailed than memories of things that actually happened. That's the 'realer than real' result from this pioneering study out of the University of Liege. Researchers compared memories across four groups β€” NDE survivors, coma patients without NDEs, coma patients with no memories, and healthy volunteers β€” using a standardized questionnaire scoring emotional intensity, clarity, and personal significance. NDE memories blew past every other category with highly significant results. The researchers propose these ultra-vivid memories work like 'flashbulb memories' (the kind your brain stamps in during intensely emotional moments) except of hallucinations rather than external events. A 2018 follow-up confirmed the pattern.

Actual Paper Abstract

Since the dawn of time, Near-Death Experiences (NDEs) have intrigued and, nowadays, are still not fully explained. Since reports of NDEs are proposed to be imagined events, and since memories of imagined events have, on average, fewer phenomenological characteristics than real events memories, we here compared phenomenological characteristics of NDEs reports with memories of imagined and real events. We included three groups of coma survivors (8 patients with NDE as defined by the Greyson NDE scale, 6 patients without NDE but with memories of their coma, 7 patients without memories of their coma) and a group of 18 age-matched healthy volunteers. Five types of memories were assessed using Memory Characteristics Questionnaire (MCQ – Johnson et al., 1988): target memories (NDE for NDE memory group, coma memory for coma memory group, and first childhood memory for no memory and control groups), old and recent real event memories and old and recent imagined event memories. Since NDEs are known to have high emotional content, participants were requested to choose the most emotionally salient memories for both real and imagined recent and old event memories. Results showed that, in NDE memories group, NDE memories have more characteristics than memories of imagined and real events (p,0.02). NDE memories contain more self-referential and emotional information and have better clarity than memories of coma (all ps,0.02). The present study showed that NDE memories contained more characteristics than real event memories and coma memories. Thus, this suggests that they cannot be considered as imagined event memories. On the contrary, their physiological origins could lead them to be really perceived although not lived in the reality. Further work is needed to better understand this phenomenon.

Research Notes

Published in PLoS ONE. Pioneering study showing NDE memories are phenomenologically richer than both real and imagined event memories ('realer than real'). Uses modified 15-item MCQ from D'Argembeau & Van der Linden (2008). From Coma Science Group, University of Liege. See Cassol et al. (2018) for follow-up replication.

Study comparing phenomenological characteristics of NDE memories with real and imagined event memories using the Memory Characteristics Questionnaire (MCQ) across four groups: 8 NDE patients, 6 coma patients with non-NDE memories, 7 coma patients without memories, and 18 healthy controls (N=39). NDE memories had significantly higher MCQ total scores than all other memory types (p < 0.05), with more self-referential information, emotional content, and clarity than coma memories (all p < 0.02). A group effect on target memories was significant (H(3,N=39)=20.57, p < 0.001). Authors conclude NDE memories cannot be considered imagined events and propose they are flashbulb memories of hallucinations.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Thonnard, Marie, Charland-Verville, Vanessa, Bredart, Serge, Dehon, Hedwige, Ledoux, Didier, Laureys, Steven, Vanhaudenhuyse, Audrey (2013). Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories. PLoS ONE. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057620
BibTeX
@article{thonnard_2013_nde_memory_reality,
  title = {Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories},
  author = {Thonnard, Marie and Charland-Verville, Vanessa and Bredart, Serge and Dehon, Hedwige and Ledoux, Didier and Laureys, Steven and Vanhaudenhuyse, Audrey},
  year = {2013},
  journal = {PLoS ONE},
  doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0057620},
}