From Michael Nahm in the Journal of Near-Death Studies:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication...xperiences
There are references to and subsequent criticisms of skeptical arguments made by Blackmore, French, Woerlee etc as well...
A shame about that missed opportunity referenced in the last paragraph. Nevertheless this paper is well worth the read.
(This post was last modified: 2021-02-01, 09:40 PM by OmniVersalNexus.)
https://www.researchgate.net/publication...xperiences
Quote:...In the real-time model, it is postulated that during critical NDEs, residual activities in the cerebrum were sufficient to generate NDEs in real time. In the reconstruction model, it is assumed that due to severe oxygen deficiency, critical NDEs could not have occurred at the time in question but were reconstructed later during the regeneration phase of the brain. To assess the plausibility of these two models, we analyzed the phenom-enology of the view of one's own body from above (autoscopy) that frequently occurs in the beginning of NDEs. In addition to the available literature, we used original descriptions of autoscopies obtained in an online survey conducted in 2015. We found that the reconstruction model is not supported by empirical findings and that some findings even speak against it. We therefore conclude that future discussions of explanatory models of NDEs should focus primarily on the neurophysiological real-time model and a third alternative according to which autoscopies and NDEs occur in relative independence from the prevailing neuro-physiological processes in the brain.
Quote:Several researchers have addressed the topic of what happens in the human brain during the minutes following cardiac arrest. Accord-ing to a generally accepted model, consciousness is lost after a few seconds, and after 30 seconds at most, EEG records no longer indicate cerebral activity (e.g. Pana et al., 2016; Visser et al., 2001; see also Parnia & Fenwick, 2002; van Lommel, 2010). In recent years, several authors reported surges of brain activity around the time of cardiac arrest in humans (e.g., Auyong et al., 2010; Chawla et al., 2009, 2017; Norton et al., 2017) and rats (Borjigin et al., 2013; Zhang et al., 2019). It is unclear, however, whether these surges bear relevance for NDEs and whether they are associated with conscious experience. According to the generally accepted model, coherent self-awareness, perceptions of the environment, as well as the creation of accurate memories are unlikely to be possible during an absence of measurable brain activity. Nevertheless, people whose cardiac arrests occurred in hospitals have repeatedly reported that during this critical period, from an elevated vantage point, they followed the activities of doctors and nurses in the vicinity of the NDErs’ physical bodies. Usually, these reports corre-spond to the actual events (Holden, 2009).
There are references to and subsequent criticisms of skeptical arguments made by Blackmore, French, Woerlee etc as well...
Quote:In summary, on closer examination and explicit consideration of the phenomenology of autoscopies and NDEs, it is apparent that the neurophysiological reconstruction model is not supported by independent findings. On the contrary, various converging lines of evidence indicate that autoscopies and, thus, also NDE elements that succeed autoscopies, occur at the time that experiencers have described them: during the crisis of real or anticipated danger. From the neurophysi-ological perspective, the available evidence clearly supports the neurophysiological real-time model that Woerlee (2010) and Blackmore (2017) advocated...
...If one assumes that conscious self-experience is exclusively determined and generated by neurological processes of the brain, drastically different neurological processes should generate drastically different subjective experiences. So far, this discrepancy between model and experience is unresolved and contributes to the conclusion that according to the current state of research, there is no satisfactory neurophysiological explanation for NDEs (Greyson et al., 2009; Nahm, 2012)...
...A further challenge to these models comes from NDEs and OBEs in babies who, due to the not-yet-completed development of their eyes and brains, should not be able to see their environment with acuity and to preserve their observations as conscious long-term mem-ories. Nevertheless, such cases exist. For example, one of co- author Nahm’s family members, who is currently 17 years old, had a difficult birth and spent the first days of his life in an incubator. He still re-members an OBE he had at the time, looking at numerous doctors in white dresses that stood at the incubator (see also Sutherland, 2009). According to these aspects of NDEs, the independence model must involve some form of extrasensory perception...
...In general, neurophysiological processes are certainly involved in NDEs as long as there is brain function, and more reliable evidence for the independence model can be provided only by further documentation of individual cases and empirical studies. However, experimental studies are difcult to conduct in the context of NDEs (Holden, 2009; Parnia et al., 2014), as are experimental studies into OBEs occurring in contexts unrelated to death (Nahm, 2013). In this regard, we attempted in our survey to identify “OBE-adepts,” NDErs who reported the sometimes-NDE-aftereffect of being able to elicit OBEs willingly and relatively reliably. Although four of our participants indicating this ability always or very often, all of them declined our request to participate in experimental OBE studies. Despite the challenges of NDE and OBE veridical perception research, medical-scientific studies into NDEs have been conducted for only about 40 years, and they already have provided highly interesting results. We expect that the coming decades will yield further exciting data.
A shame about that missed opportunity referenced in the last paragraph. Nevertheless this paper is well worth the read.