Neuro-Functional Modeling of Near-Death Experiences in Contexts of Altered States of Consciousness
📄 Original study ↗📌 Appears in:
Plain English Summary
Ever wonder if near-death experiences are a glimpse of the afterlife or just your brain doing weird things under extreme stress? This paper makes a strong case for the brain-based explanation. The authors pulled together evidence from a fascinating range of sources: people on ketamine and DMT, patients having seizures or undergoing brain stimulation, and -- here's the showstopper -- roughly 1,000 episodes of fighter pilots blacking out from intense G-forces over 16 years. When they compared the themes people report during NDEs (tunnels of light, out-of-body sensations, life reviews) with what happens in these experimentally triggered altered states, there was huge overlap. They even pinpointed out-of-body feelings to a specific brain region called the temporo-parietal junction, where the brain stitches together your sense of where your body is in space. The takeaway: NDEs look a lot like hallucinations produced by brains under duress, not evidence of an afterlife.
Actual Paper Abstract
Near-death experiences (NDEs) including out-of-body experiences (OBEs) have been fascinating phenomena of perception both for affected persons and for communities in science and medicine. Modern progress in the recording of changing brain functions during the time between clinical death and brain death opened the perspective to address and understand the generation of NDEs in brain states of altered consciousness. Changes of consciousness can experimentally be induced in well-controlled clinical or laboratory settings. Reports of the persons having experienced the changes can inform about the similarity of the experiences with those from original NDEs. Thus, we collected neuro-functional models of NDEs including OBEs with experimental backgrounds of drug consumption, epilepsy, brain stimulation, and ischemic stress, and included so far largely unappreciated data from fighter pilot tests under gravitational stress generating cephalic nervous system ischemia. Since we found a large overlap of NDE themes or topics from original NDE reports with those from neuro-functional NDE models, we can state that, collectively, the models offer scientifically appropriate causal explanations for the occurrence of NDEs. The generation of OBEs, one of the NDE themes, can be localized in the temporo-parietal junction (TPJ) of the brain, a multimodal association area. The evaluated literature suggests that NDEs may emerge as hallucination-like phenomena from a brain in altered states of consciousness (ASCs).
Research Notes
Comprehensive neuroscientific case for NDEs as brain-based phenomena. Uniquely integrates fighter pilot G-LOC data (~1,000 episodes) with standard neurofunctional evidence. Represents the neurological/mechanistic perspective in the NDE survival debate (controversy #7 Con side). Note: catalog ID misattributes authorship — actual authors are Romand & Ehret (2023), not Palmieri et al. (2022).
Neuro-functional models of near-death experiences (NDEs) are evaluated to determine whether NDEs can be explained as brain-based phenomena occurring during altered states of consciousness (ASCs). Evidence is drawn from drug effects (ketamine, DMT), epileptic seizures, electrical brain stimulation, anesthetic awareness, and ischemic stress, including ~1,000 fighter pilot G-LOC episodes recorded across 16 years. A large overlap was found between NDE themes from original reports and those induced experimentally. Out-of-body experiences can be localized to the temporo-parietal junction (TPJ). The models collectively suggest NDEs emerge as hallucination-like phenomena from brains in ASCs.
Links
Related Papers
Cites
- The Near-Death Experience Scale: Construction, Reliability, and Validity — Greyson, Bruce (1983)
- AWARE--AWAreness during REsuscitation--A prospective study — Parnia, Sam (2014)
- DMT Models the Near-Death Experience — Timmermann, Christopher (2018)
- "Reality" of near-death-experience memories: evidence from a psychodynamic and electrophysiological integrated study — Palmieri, Arianna (2014)
- Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories — Thonnard, Marie (2013)
- Qualitative thematic analysis of the phenomenology of near-death experiences — Cassol, Helena (2018)
- Temporality of Features in Near-Death Experience Narratives — Martial, Charlotte (2017)
- Near-Death Experiences in Non-Life-Threatening Events and Coma of Different Etiologies — Charland-Verville, V (2014)
Companion
- Epistemological Implications of Near-Death Experiences and Other Non-Ordinary Mental Expressions: Moving Beyond the Concept of Altered State of Consciousness — Facco, Enrico (2015)
- Near death experiences: a multidisciplinary hypothesis — Bókkon, István (2013)
- Explanation of Near-Death Experiences: A Systematic Analysis of Case Reports and Qualitative Research — Hashemi, Amirhossein (2023)
- Non-local Consciousness: A Concept Based on Scientific Research on Near-Death Experiences During Cardiac Arrest — van Lommel, Pim (2013)
- There Is Nothing Paranormal about Near-Death Experiences: How Neuroscience Can Explain Seeing Bright Lights, Meeting the Dead, or Being Convinced You Are One of Them — Mobbs, Dean (2011)
- The Mystical Experience and Its Neural Correlates — Woollacott, Marjorie (2020)
More in Nde
The Central Clinical Relevance of Near-Death Experiences in Acute Care Contexts
AWAreness during REsuscitation - II: A Multi-Center Study of Consciousness and Awareness in Cardiac Arrest
Which Near-Death Experience Features Are Associated with Reduced Fear of Death?
Advancing the Evidence for Survival of Consciousness
The Near-Death Experience Content (NDE-C) scale: Development and psychometric validation
📋 Cite this paper
Romand, Raymond, Ehret, Günter (2023). Neuro-Functional Modeling of Near-Death Experiences in Contexts of Altered States of Consciousness. Frontiers in Psychology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.846159
@article{palmieri_2022_neurofunctional_nde,
title = {Neuro-Functional Modeling of Near-Death Experiences in Contexts of Altered States of Consciousness},
author = {Romand, Raymond and Ehret, Günter},
year = {2023},
journal = {Frontiers in Psychology},
doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2022.846159},
}