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According to foreign media reports, no one knows exactly what will happen when we die, but many have described their near-death experiences.
although these near-death experiences take many forms, some of the characteristics are the same, such as seeing a bright light, feeling calm and peaceful, and seeing a tunnel.
at the University of the Sun in Belgium analyzed the frequency and sequence of these features at the time of death, or helped us catch a glimpse of what happens after death.
and the results show that there is no identical near-death experience.
Charlotte Marshall, lead author of the study, said: "As far as we know, no study has formally analyzed whether the characteristics of near-death experiences appear in a certain order and frequency.
the purpose of our study is to describe two perspectives from a global distribution and an individual, to understand the frequency distribution of these characteristics, and to understand the order in which the characteristics of different near-death experiences are most often followed.
researchers collected and analyzed written reports from 154 subjects who had had near-death experiences. The
analysis showed that everyone experienced several phenomena on the verge of death, with the highest frequency reported being a sense of calm (80 percent of all respondents), seeing a bright light (69 percent of all respondents), and meeting a soul or someone (64 percent of all respondents).
the least common experiences were accelerated thinking (5 per cent of all respondents) and foreseeing the future (4 per cent of all respondents).
chronological order, about one-third of respondents had an out-of-body experience on the verge of death, and 36 percent said regression to the body was the last experience.
: "This suggests that the near-death experience usually begins with the feeling of being separated from the body and ends with a return to the body," Marshall said.
, the most common sequence of these characteristics is: exogenous experience, through tunnels, seeing bright light, feeling calm.
22 percent of respondents reported near-death experiences in this order, and while many had similar near-death experiences, the researchers noted that each near-death experience had a unique pattern of occurrence.
s findings suggest that near-death experiences do not necessarily contain all of these characteristics and do not appear in the same order, " says Marshall.
that while near-death experiences may have a universal nature and therefore exhibit several of the same characteristics, we observe that they do not appear in exactly the same order.
this raises an important question: what can be considered a universal nature of a near-death experience, and what is not? More research is needed to further understand these differences and to analyze the extent to which these experiences reflect people's expectations and cultural backgrounds, as well as the neurophysiological mechanisms behind near-death experiences.
" Source: Science And Technology Daily.