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A Systematic Review of MDMA’s Effects on Social Functioning in Placebo-Controlled Trials

Victoria Burmester, Laura Aggett, David J Nutt, Chloe Wong, Sofia Bonito, Sophie Leigh, Tess Watford, D. P. Nicholls

May 4, 2026 preprint DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/sgdau_v1 via OpenAlex

Summary

MDMA consistently enhances subjective social experiences, such as feelings of sociability and emotional empathy, but does not reliably lead to observable prosocial behaviors like cooperation or trust. Across 76 studies, the drug reduced sensitivity to negative social cues and impaired recognition of fear and anger, indicating a strong modulation of social threat processing. These findings suggest that while MDMA alters social interactions on a personal level, this does not always translate into improved social behavior.

Study at a glance

Design systematic review
Sample size 76
Population adults in placebo-controlled studies
Key finding MDMA reliably enhances subjective social experience but does not consistently translate into observable prosocial behavior.

Abstract

Background3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) is associated with distinctive prosocial and empathogenic effects, yet the consistency and scope of its impact on social functioning in humans remain unclear. Although numerous placebo-controlled studies have examined MDMA’s acute social effects, findings vary widely across subjective and behavioural domains.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review of placebo-controlled studies investigating the acute effects of MDMA on social functioning in adults. Outcomes included self-reported social and emotional experience, task-based measures of social cognition and behaviour, and relevant physiological and neurobiological indices. Studies administering MDMA as the sole intervention were included.ResultsAcross 76 studies, MDMA reliably enhanced subjective social experience, including feelings of sociability, emotional openness, closeness, and emotional empathy. In contrast, behavioural manifestations of prosociality, such as cooperation and trust in economic or performance-based tasks, were inconsistent and strongly context dependent. A convergent finding across behavioural, physiological, and neuroimaging measures was reduced processing of social threat, including diminished sensitivity to negative social cues and impaired recognition of fear and anger.ConclusionsMDMA consistently alters how social interactions are experienced, but subjective changes do not reliably translate into observable prosocial behaviour. Its most robust social effects are the modulation of social threat processing rather than a general enhancement of prosocial action. These findings help explain the divergence between felt and enacted social effects of MDMA and highlight the importance of context and measurement in interpreting laboratory outcomes. Clarifying these mechanisms has implications for understanding MDMA’s therapeutic potential in conditions characterised by heightened social threat and avoidance.

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