Csaba Orban
Senior Research Scientist at the National University of Singapore
Data updated
Papers
Trials
Research Footprint
Csaba Orban appears in 5 tracked papers (2016–2017), most studied alongside LSD, across Neuroimaging & Brain Measures, Healthy Volunteers and Set & Setting.
Most-cited paper: Neural correlates of the LSD experience revealed by multimodal neuroimaging (875 citations).
Frequent co-authors: Robin Carhart-Harris, David Nutt and Leor Roseman.
Background & Research
Csaba Orban is a neuroscience researcher focused on human functional neuroimaging, brain connectivity, and the effects of psychedelics on brain function. He has coauthored multiple influential LSD studies with the Imperial College London psychedelic neuroimaging group, including work on music-evoked brain activity, ego dissolution, and visual cortex connectivity, and later appears as a senior research scientist at the National University of Singapore. His broader research also spans resting-state fMRI, time-of-day effects on brain connectivity, and large-scale predictive modeling in neuroimaging.
Key Impact
He is a neuroimaging researcher whose work on LSD, music-evoked brain activity, ego dissolution, and connectivity changes has helped define modern psychedelic neuroscience.
Collaboration Network
19 collaborators· click a node to visit their profile
Full network →Affiliations
Institutions, companies, and organisations Csaba Orban is associated with.
National University of Singapore
The National University of Singapore (NUS) is a comprehensive, research-intensive public university in Singapore, founded in 1905. It is a leading global university based in Singapore, known for a wide range of undergraduate and graduate programs and strong research output.
View stakeholder →Imperial College London
academicThe Centre for Psychedelic Research, led by Professor David Nutt and Dr. David Erritzoe, focuses heavily on the action of psychedelic drugs in the brain and their clinical utility as aides to psychotherapy. Thanks to their extensive neuroimaging studies, this group has proposed vital mechanisms for how psychedelics work, including the Entropic Brain Theory and REBUS (RElaxed Beliefs Under Psychedelics).
View stakeholder →