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Romy Lorenz

Imperial College London

2 papers in the library · 442 citations · publishing 2017-2018

Papers

Predicting Responses to Psychedelics: A Prospective Study

Frontiers in Pharmacology November 2, 2018 Adam D. G. Hampshire, Christopher Timmermann, Christopher Timmermann et al. 422 citations

Psychological well-being increased two weeks after a psychedelic experience and remained elevated at four weeks. Higher ratings of a 'mystical-type experience' positively influenced this change in well-being, while 'challenging experience' and 'visual effects' did not. Having 'clear intentions' for the experience fostered mystical-type experiences. A positive 'set' and recreational intentions reduced the likelihood of a challenging experience. The trait 'absorption' and higher drug doses amplified all aspects of the acute experience. Baseline traits had the strongest effect on well-being change, underscoring the importance of extra-pharmacological factors in shaping responses to psychedelics.

Effects of LSD on music-evoked brain activity

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) June 25, 2017 Mendel Kaelen, Romy Lorenz, Frederick S. Barrett et al. 20 citations preprint

Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) alters how the brain processes music, particularly by enhancing activity and connectivity in networks linked to music perception and emotion. Sixteen healthy volunteers listened to a 7-minute music piece during fMRI after taking either 75 mcg of LSD or a placebo. The acoustic feature of timbral complexity—the richness of the music's spectral distribution—drove the most pronounced changes in brain activity and connectivity under LSD. These changes correlated with increased feelings of wonder evoked by the music. The results suggest a neurobiological basis for why music is useful in psychedelic therapy.