Neuroimaging & Brain MeasuresPsilocybin

Psilocybin in long-term meditators: Effects on default mode network functional connectivity and retrospective ratings of qualitative experience

This double-blind, placebo-controlled study (n=16) examined the effects of high-dose psilocybin on subjective experience and brain connectivity in long-term meditators. Results indicate that psilocybin induced profound personal meaning and altered functional connectivity within the default mode network (DMN) and between the DMN and hippocampus, effects that were observable the day after dosing.

Authors

  • Roland Griffiths
  • Matthew Johnson
  • Frederick Barrett

Published

Drug and Alcohol Dependence
individual Study

Abstract

Aims

Descriptions of meditation experiences can bear striking similarity to descriptions of some experiences with classic (serotonergic) hallucinogens. Neuroimaging studies reveal striking overlap in the effects of psilocybin and the effects of meditation on functional connectivity of the default mode network (DMN). This ongoing study explored the effects of psilocybin on subjective experience and DMN connectivity in long-term meditators.

Methods

16 meditators (mean lifetime meditation = 4206 h) received either a placebo (n = 8) or a high dose psilocybin (n = 8) capsule before a laboratory session. Retrospective self-report measures of subjective experience and resting-state fMRI data were collected the day after the session. Seed-based functional connectivity analyses were applied to fMRI data. Self-report measures and functional connectivity of the DMN were compared between placebo and psilocybin groups.

Results

Participants who received psilocybin attributed significantly greater meaning, spiritual significance, psychological challenge, and psychological insight to their session experiences than those who received placebo. 75% of participants in the psilocybin group rated the experience to be in the top 10 most meaningful experiences of their life. Participants who received psilocybin also showed lower functional connectivity between hippocampal and posterior DMN regions and greater functional connectivity among DMN regions than those who received placebo.

Conclusions

Participants attributed substantial meaning to their high-dose psilocybin experience, and showed changes in brain function the day after a high dose of psilocybin. Further research should explore the relationship of these enduring changes in brain function to abuse liability and therapeutic outcomes with psilocybin.

Unlocked with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'Psilocybin in long-term meditators: Effects on default mode network functional connectivity and retrospective ratings of qualitative experience'

Editorial

βBlossom's Take

This paper is useful because it puts psilocybin into a population already accustomed to altered states, which helps separate the drug effect from novelty alone. The finding that meaning and DMN connectivity shift together the next day makes it a neat bridge between meditation research, subjective experience and network-level brain measures.

Study Details

Cited By (2)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study

Exploring the effect of microdosing psychedelics on creativity in an open-label natural setting

Prochazkova, L., Lippelt, D. P., Colzato, L. S. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2018)

179 cited