Leonardo Novelli
Research Fellow, Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, Monash University
Data updated
Research Footprint
Leonardo Novelli appears in 6 tracked papers (2021–2026), most studied alongside Psilocybin and LSD, across Neuroimaging & Brain Measures, Healthy Volunteers and Depressive Disorders.
Most-cited paper: Effective connectivity of functionally anticorrelated networks under LSD (47 citations).
Frequent co-authors: Adeel Razi, Devon Stoliker and Katrin Preller.
Background & Research
Leonardo Novelli is a research fellow at Monash University’s Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health. His research focuses on computational neuroscience, brain network inference, and effective connectivity, with a particular emphasis on psychedelic states and neuroimaging. He has co-authored studies on LSD- and psilocybin-induced changes in brain networks, including ego dissolution, visual imagery, and amygdala-related effects.
Key Impact
His work helps explain how psychedelics like psilocybin and LSD alter large-scale brain connectivity, subjective experience, and self-related processing in healthy participants.
Collaboration Network
12 collaborators· click a node to visit their profile
Full network →Compounds
Topics
Top Collaborators
Affiliations
Institutions, companies, and organisations Leonardo Novelli is associated with.
Monash University
academicThe Clinical Psychedelic Lab, led by Dr. Paul Liknaitzky, conducts robust clinical trials exploring the efficacy and safety of psychedelic-assisted therapies for various mental health conditions within the Australian healthcare context.
View stakeholder →University of Sydney
academicThe Brain and Mind Centre is advancing psychedelic science with a multidisciplinary focus on developing innovative treatments using AI and preparing for human clinical trials to treat severe mental illness.
View stakeholder →