Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasisensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and there is an ongoing debate over whether SED are associated with pathology, such as grief complications. Research into these experiences has been conducted in various disciplines, including psychiatry, psychology, and anthropology, without much crossover. This review brings these areas of research together, drawing on the expertise of an interdisciplinary working group formed as part of the International Consortium for Hallucination Research (ICHR). It examines existing evidence on the phenomenology, associated factors, and impact of SED, including the role of culture, and discusses the main theories on SED and how these phenomena compare with...
During the bereavement process, people often report anomalous experiences that may be interpreted as...
As defined by Greyson and Stevenson (1980) near death experiences are “refer[ed] to an altered state...
It is common for bereaved people to see, hear, feel or sense the presence of the deceased, yet ...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasisensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and ...
Experiencing the continued presence of the deceased is common among the bereaved, whether as a senso...
The philosophy of grief has directed little attention to bereavement’s impact on perceptual experien...
Experiences of presence are common in bereavement. The bereaved person may see the deceased, hear th...
This paper addresses the nature of sensed-presence experiences that are commonplace among the bereav...
It has been noted that experiences of perceived interaction with the dead are common for the bereave...
Unexplained experiences are common in the context of bereavement. According to the theory of Continu...
The research in the field of Near-Death-Experiences (NDE) shows us various reports of the process of...
Background: Removal of the "bereavement exclusion" criterion for major depression and proposed resea...
During the bereavement process, people often report anomalous experiences that may be interpreted as...
As defined by Greyson and Stevenson (1980) near death experiences are “refer[ed] to an altered state...
It is common for bereaved people to see, hear, feel or sense the presence of the deceased, yet ...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and...
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasisensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and ...
Experiencing the continued presence of the deceased is common among the bereaved, whether as a senso...
The philosophy of grief has directed little attention to bereavement’s impact on perceptual experien...
Experiences of presence are common in bereavement. The bereaved person may see the deceased, hear th...
This paper addresses the nature of sensed-presence experiences that are commonplace among the bereav...
It has been noted that experiences of perceived interaction with the dead are common for the bereave...
Unexplained experiences are common in the context of bereavement. According to the theory of Continu...
The research in the field of Near-Death-Experiences (NDE) shows us various reports of the process of...
Background: Removal of the "bereavement exclusion" criterion for major depression and proposed resea...
During the bereavement process, people often report anomalous experiences that may be interpreted as...
As defined by Greyson and Stevenson (1980) near death experiences are “refer[ed] to an altered state...
It is common for bereaved people to see, hear, feel or sense the presence of the deceased, yet ...