Psilocin, the active compound in psychedelic mushrooms, impairs the ability to distinguish between static and moving images in both humans and rats. In a visual discrimination task, human participants and male rats were asked to judge whether an image was static or moving. Under psilocin, both species showed significant difficulty in this task. In humans, the impairment tracked psilocin plasma levels and self-reported hallucination intensity. In rats, psilocin selectively disrupted performance in a motion-based task but not a luminance-based task, suggesting a specific effect on motion perception. Decision time was also linked to discrimination impairment. This is the first evidence that rats experience visual distortions similar to those reported by humans, offering a model for studying altered visual perception in drug-induced and psychiatric conditions.
Under psilocybin, healthy volunteers perceived time as moving more slowly and their temporal precision decreased, particularly for intervals longer than 2 seconds. In a double-blinded placebo-controlled study with 24 participants, the bisection point shifted rightward, indicating subjective time slowing, and the just noticeable difference increased, reflecting reduced accuracy. These changes were captured both by performance on the Temporal Bisection Task and by self-report scales. The findings suggest psilocybin disrupts cognitive functions such as working memory and attention, altering time perception through serotonergic system involvement.