This has come up in other threads here and there, but I'd like to have it in one place and open to anyone: moving forward, what would you like to see researchers of NDEs do/change/explore/consider/modify/etc. to improve the body of knowledge?
My own thoughts (such as they are; not being any kind of scientist, or even very scientifically-minded, I may well not have the slightest idea what would be a good move):
- More AWAREs. I know there were pilot studies before AWARE and AWARE II, but there should be more large-scale studies done by other teams, and not just in the Anglo-American sphere. There should be studies like this being run in India and the Middle East, in Japan and China, in Latin America, in Central Europe - everywhere, all done on a comparable scale or greater. Personally, I doubt any targets will be spotted in AWARE II (none of the potential seers know will know what to look for, and even the most eye-catching of targets can be missed when one is distracted by the small detail of one's own body being worked on), but the greater the number of targets out there, the greater the odds.
(I'd also say future AWARE-type studies could do something other than aim for the targets. I think it was Max who suggested on here once that NDE research should take on attributes of crime scene investigation. Participating hospitals could have a small team of investigators on-staff, trained in what questions to ask and how to ask them, who would move in for interviews as early as possible to minimize any risk of confirmation bias, embellishment, etc. The same investigators could also be responsible for confirming or refuting any observations NDErs may report about people/places outside the hospital, or they could pass those elements on to another team of investigators blind as to the reason for confirming these details.)
- Refined definition. You could simultaneously narrow and broaden the definition of a NDE by limiting it only to those experiences that happen after either cardiac arrest or severe brain injury. Experiences had while healthy but in danger, or healthy and at random, may be extremely similar in content, and may be related, but for the purposes of investigating what, if anything, is possible for mind/consciousness at the point of death, I would think you'd want to focus in on exactly that circumstance. That's the narrowing; the broadening would come from including any and all conscious experiences following cardiac arrest/brain injury as a NDE, whatever its content. As I understand it, AWARE found numerous cases of awareness to some degree during arrest that weren't labeled as NDEs; I would think those would be of value too. If one collected all such experiences and looked for patterns, you could confirm or refute certain ideas - ex. how much likelier is it to have a NDE the further one gets to the point of no return, how much likelier it is that one will have a high Greyson Scale rating the further one gets to the point of no return, how much time under cardiac arrest seems to be necessary to have an experience, etc.
- Refined Greyson Scale: Related the last point. I don't dispute the value of having a scale to measure NDEs, but the Greyson Scale has problems. Studies that seek to compare NDEs to hallucinations, meditative experiences, or drug trips make use of it, and going by the numbers and the bullet-point descriptions of the scale, they report strong correlations. But if you look at the actual descriptions of those experiences (when they're made available in such studies; they aren't always, a very poor decision IMO) the content of them seems a very poor match to the classic NDE experience. How exactly one could refine the scale and guard against that flaw in it, I have no idea.
My own thoughts (such as they are; not being any kind of scientist, or even very scientifically-minded, I may well not have the slightest idea what would be a good move):
- More AWAREs. I know there were pilot studies before AWARE and AWARE II, but there should be more large-scale studies done by other teams, and not just in the Anglo-American sphere. There should be studies like this being run in India and the Middle East, in Japan and China, in Latin America, in Central Europe - everywhere, all done on a comparable scale or greater. Personally, I doubt any targets will be spotted in AWARE II (none of the potential seers know will know what to look for, and even the most eye-catching of targets can be missed when one is distracted by the small detail of one's own body being worked on), but the greater the number of targets out there, the greater the odds.
(I'd also say future AWARE-type studies could do something other than aim for the targets. I think it was Max who suggested on here once that NDE research should take on attributes of crime scene investigation. Participating hospitals could have a small team of investigators on-staff, trained in what questions to ask and how to ask them, who would move in for interviews as early as possible to minimize any risk of confirmation bias, embellishment, etc. The same investigators could also be responsible for confirming or refuting any observations NDErs may report about people/places outside the hospital, or they could pass those elements on to another team of investigators blind as to the reason for confirming these details.)
- Refined definition. You could simultaneously narrow and broaden the definition of a NDE by limiting it only to those experiences that happen after either cardiac arrest or severe brain injury. Experiences had while healthy but in danger, or healthy and at random, may be extremely similar in content, and may be related, but for the purposes of investigating what, if anything, is possible for mind/consciousness at the point of death, I would think you'd want to focus in on exactly that circumstance. That's the narrowing; the broadening would come from including any and all conscious experiences following cardiac arrest/brain injury as a NDE, whatever its content. As I understand it, AWARE found numerous cases of awareness to some degree during arrest that weren't labeled as NDEs; I would think those would be of value too. If one collected all such experiences and looked for patterns, you could confirm or refute certain ideas - ex. how much likelier is it to have a NDE the further one gets to the point of no return, how much likelier it is that one will have a high Greyson Scale rating the further one gets to the point of no return, how much time under cardiac arrest seems to be necessary to have an experience, etc.
- Refined Greyson Scale: Related the last point. I don't dispute the value of having a scale to measure NDEs, but the Greyson Scale has problems. Studies that seek to compare NDEs to hallucinations, meditative experiences, or drug trips make use of it, and going by the numbers and the bullet-point descriptions of the scale, they report strong correlations. But if you look at the actual descriptions of those experiences (when they're made available in such studies; they aren't always, a very poor decision IMO) the content of them seems a very poor match to the classic NDE experience. How exactly one could refine the scale and guard against that flaw in it, I have no idea.