Mixed-methods analysis on psychedelic-augmented meditation experiences from a randomized controlled mindfulness retreat
Jonas T. T. Schlomberg, Daniel Meling, Robin Grylka, Emilia A Vasella, Dominik Augustinovic, Milan Scheidegger
Scientific Reports March 18, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-39261-5 via OpenAlex
Summary
The study explored the subjective effects of DMT/harmine on meditative states in experienced meditators through a randomized controlled trial. It found that meditation under DMT-harmine and placebo showed differences in thematic content and experiential diversity, yet shared similar semantic features. The analysis highlighted the use of Buddhist concepts and suggested potential synergistic effects between meditation and psychedelics, along with the importance of non-drug factors in therapeutic outcomes.
Study at a glance
| Design | randomized controlled trial |
|---|---|
| Population | experienced meditators |
| Key finding | The study revealed shared experiential features between meditative and psychedelic states, indicating potential synergistic effects of meditation and psychedelics. |
Abstract
The acute subjective effects (ASEs) of psychedelic substances are assumed to play a critical role for their therapeutic and well-being enhancing benefits. However, recent work voiced critique regarding the validity and adequacy of conventional measures and modalities utilized to study ASEs of psychedelics, and call for data-driven, unbiased, and experience-based research approaches. The emergence of advanced Natural Language Processing techniques as an enabler of data-driven qualitative research holds promise for addressing the current biases and limitations in the investigation of ASEs of psychedelics. In the present study, we employed an NLP-driven, multi-method analytical paradigm to study the subjective experiences of participants in an ecologically valid RCT examining the effect of DMT/harmine on meditative states in experienced meditators using phenomenological interviews. Our analysis showed differences in the thematic landscape and experiential diversity of meditation under placebo and meditation under DMT-harmine while showing overlap in their semantic topographies. The mixed-modal analysis successfully identified a wide range of well-established primary subjective effects while also detecting subtle, patterned regularities in language that traditional hypothesis-driven approaches alone may overlook. It revealed a pronounced use of Buddhist concepts and spiritual jargon to describe and integrate the subjective experience, independent of the experimental condition. Findings suggested shared experiential features between meditative and psychedelic states, a strong drug-context interconnection and potential synergistic effects of meditation and psychedelics. We advocate for using NLP-augmented, data-driven paradigms to deepen the understanding of psychedelic subjectivity and emphasize the importance of extra-pharmacological factors in shaping therapeutic outcomes.