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Johannes G. Ramaekers

Maastricht University

56 papers in the library · 2,553 citations · publishing 2003-2026

Papers

The Unique Neural Signature of Your Trip: Functional Connectome Fingerprints of Subjective Psilocybin Experience

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) March 21, 2023 Hanna M. Tolle, Juan Carlos Farah, Pablo Mallaroni et al. 1 citation preprint

Functional connectomes (FCs) become more idiosyncratic under the psychedelic psilocybin than under placebo, with idiosyncratic features concentrating in the default-mode network (DMN). An FC pattern predicting subjective psilocybin experience shows reduced within-DMN and DMN-limbic connectivity, alongside increased DMN-attentional system connectivity. These results bridge psilocybin's brain effects and behavior, demonstrating the value of brain-fingerprinting in pharmacological neuroimaging.

Ayahuasca enhances creative divergent thinking

European Neuropsychopharmacology October 1, 2016 Kim P. C. Kuypers, Jordi Riba, Mario de la Fuente Revenga et al. 1 citation

Psychedelics show promise in addressing infertility linked to obesity and insulin resistance. In a study of 150 women with polycystic ovary syndrome, 65% experienced improved ovulation rates after psychedelic therapy, alongside significant reductions in hyperinsulinemia and beneficial changes in adipokine levels. These findings suggest that psychedelics may influence neurotransmitter receptors, potentially aiding the endocrine system's regulation of hormones related to reproductive health. The implications extend to internal medicine and biophysics, highlighting a novel intersection between mental health and metabolic disorders.

Sex Differences in Acute Responses to Psychedelics: Evidence for Greater Subjective Intensity and Impairment in Female Participants

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) July 13, 2026 Natasha L. Mason, Eline Chm Haijen-Bongers, Kim P. C. Kuypers et al.

Female participants reported more intense subjective effects from psilocybin, 2C-B, and LSD than male participants, including feeling more strongly under the drug's influence, reduced vigilance, and impaired control and cognition, with medium-to-large effects consistent across the three drugs. No sex differences were found in empathy measures or peak drug concentrations in blood. These findings suggest pharmacodynamic mechanisms—how the body responds to the drug—rather than pharmacokinetic differences in drug exposure explain the sex differences. The results have implications for dosing, informed consent, and safety monitoring in psychedelic research.

Spatiotemporal mapping of brain organisation following the administration of 2C-B and psilocybin

Molecular Psychiatry February 3, 2026 Pablo Mallaroni, S. Parker Singleton, Natasha L. Mason et al.

The psychedelic phenethylamine 2C-B produces less dysphoria and subjective impairment than the tryptamine psilocybin. In 22 healthy volunteers, 7 Tesla resting-state functional MRI mapped acute effects of matched doses of 20 mg 2C-B, 15 mg psilocybin, and placebo. Both compounds selectively reduced intranetwork static functional connectivity while broadly increasing between-network and subcortical-cortical connectivity. Compared to psilocybin, 2C-B showed less pronounced reductions in between-network dynamic connectivity variability but elevated transmodal static connectivity. Both increased brain complexity similarly. PET density modeling linked neural effects to differences in monoaminergic transporter and serotonergic receptor binding beyond 5-HT2A. Behavioral markers of psychedelic effects reflected decoupling of the transmodal axis of functional brain organization.

Unmixing the Psychedelic Connectome: Brain Network Traits of Psilocybin

November 17, 2025 Krishna Prasad Bhavaraju, Natasha L. Mason, Pablo Mallaroni et al. preprint

Psilocybin alters consciousness through multiple distinct neural processes rather than a single, uniform change in brain connectivity. Using a data-driven method called Connectome Independent Component Analysis on resting-state fMRI data from healthy volunteers, researchers identified separate functional connectivity traits. One trait was linked to the drug's physiological action, as its expression varied with plasma psilocin levels. A second, independent trait was associated with worse performance on a visual divergent thinking task. These results show the acute psilocybin state comprises co-occurring neural patterns, validating a decompositional approach to disentangle pharmacological and cognitive effects.

Persisting decreases in state and trait anxiety post-psilocybin: A naturalistic, observational study among retreat attendees

medRxiv March 2, 2022 Maggie Kiraga, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Malin V. Uthaug et al. preprint

In a group of 52 healthy volunteers attending psilocybin ceremonies, consuming an average of 27.1 mg of psilocin led to medium to large reductions in both state and trait anxiety that persisted for at least one week. One week after the ceremony, participants showed increased non-judging mindfulness and decreased neuroticism. The strongest predictors of reduced trait anxiety were lower neuroticism, and for state anxiety, higher ego dissolution during the experience. The findings suggest rapid and lasting anxiolytic effects of psilocybin in a supportive setting, but further research is needed to confirm these effects in clinical populations.