Publications by authors named "Devon Stoliker"

Visual alterations under classic psychedelics can include rich phenomenological accounts of eyes-closed imagery. Preclinical evidence suggests agonism of the 5-HT2A receptor may reduce synaptic gain to produce psychedelic-induced imagery. However, this has not been investigated in humans.

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Background: Serotonergic psychedelics, such as psilocybin, alter perceptual and cognitive systems that are functionally integrated with the amygdala. These changes can alter cognition and emotions that are hypothesized to contribute to their therapeutic utility. However, the neural mechanisms of cognitive and subcortical systems altered by psychedelics are not well understood.

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Neuroimaging studies of psychedelics have advanced our understanding of hierarchical brain organization and the mechanisms underlying their subjective and therapeutic effects. The primary mechanism of action of classic psychedelics is binding to serotonergic 5-HT2A receptors. Agonist activity at these receptors leads to neuromodulatory changes in synaptic efficacy that can have a profound effect on hierarchical message-passing in the brain.

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Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses how classic psychedelics like LSD can cause a shift in one's sense of self, linking this to brain activity in specific networks.
  • The study involved 25 healthy adults who were given either LSD or a placebo, and the researchers analyzed brain scans to observe changes in connectivity between different brain networks.
  • Results showed that LSD altered the usual interplay between the default mode network and other networks, which may contribute to ego dissolution and changes in consciousness.
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Evidence suggests classic psychedelics reduce the precision of belief updating and enable access to a range of alternate hypotheses that underwrite how we make sense of the world. This process, in the higher cortices, has been postulated to explain the therapeutic efficacy of psychedelics for the treatment of internalizing disorders. We argue reduced precision also underpins change to consciousness, known as "," and that alterations to consciousness and attention under psychedelics have a common mechanism of reduced precision of Bayesian belief updating.

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