Near-Death Experiences (NDEs) are not well explained. Because NDEs are sometimes considered imagined, researchers compared the phenomenological characteristics of NDE memories with memories of real and imagined events. Coma survivors with NDEs (8), with coma memories but no NDE (6), and without coma memories (7), plus 18 healthy volunteers, completed the Memory Characteristics Questionnaire. NDE memories had more characteristics than memories of imagined or real events, and more self-referential and emotional information and better clarity than coma memories. These findings suggest NDE memories cannot be considered imagined events; they may be perceived as real despite not being lived in physical reality.
Near death experiences (NDEs) reported after a non-life-threatening event (NDE-like) are similar in intensity and content to those occurring after a pathological coma (real NDE). In a retrospective analysis of 190 reports meeting the Greyson NDE scale threshold (score >7/32), the most common feature was peacefulness (89-93%), and only 1% recounted a negative experience. The intensity and features did not differ between NDE-like and real NDE groups, nor among coma causes (anoxic, traumatic, other). However, the core features were more frequently reported in this retrospective anoxic cohort compared to historical prospective data, suggesting that retrospective recall may shape the experience's content.