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Leor Roseman

Centre for Psychedelic Research, Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, London, UK. l.roseman@exeter.ac.uk.

90 papers in the library · 6,130 citations · publishing 2014-2026

Papers

Quality of Acute Psychedelic Experience Predicts Therapeutic Efficacy of Psilocybin for Treatment-Resistant Depression

Frontiers in Pharmacology January 17, 2018 Leor Roseman, David Nutt, Robin Carhart‐Harris 814 citations

In patients with treatment-resistant depression given psilocybin, the quality of the acute psychedelic experience—specifically the intensity of oceanic boundlessness (a mystical-type experience) and dread of ego dissolution (anxiety-like experience)—predicted improvements in depressive symptoms at 5 weeks. Sensory perceptual effects had negligible predictive value. The findings support the view that the subjective quality of the psychedelic experience is a key mediator of long-term mental health changes, suggesting that therapeutic approaches should aim to enhance mystical-type experiences and reduce anxiety.

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.

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.

Psychedelics, Meditation, and Self-Consciousness

Frontiers in Psychology September 4, 2018 Raphaël Millière, Robin Carhart‐Harris, Leor Roseman et al. 402 citations

Both meditation and psychedelic drugs like psilocybin and LSD can disrupt the sense of self, but these disruptions are not uniform. Meditation traditions aim to dissolve the self through altered states, while psychedelics produce drug-induced ego dissolution via serotonin receptor agonism. The authors argue that self-consciousness is a multidimensional construct, with narrative aspects (autobiographical memory, self-related thoughts) and embodied aspects (multisensory processes) being differently affected by each. They caution against conflating temporary self-loss with long-term selflessness as a trait, though preliminary evidence suggests possible correlations. The article calls for nuanced understanding of these phenomena.

The effects of psilocybin and MDMA on between-network resting state functional connectivity in healthy volunteers

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience May 27, 2014 Leor Roseman, Robert Leech, Amanda Feilding et al. 293 citations

Psychedelic drugs like psilocybin and MDMA perturb consciousness in distinct ways, offering a tool to study brain mechanisms underlying conscious states. In placebo-controlled studies, psilocybin increased resting-state functional connectivity between brain networks, making them less differentiated, while decreasing connectivity between visual and sensorimotor networks. MDMA produced less marked changes in between-network connectivity, suggesting that the extensive network alterations under psilocybin may be unique to classic psychedelics and relate to their profound effects on consciousness. This analytical approach could help characterize other altered conscious states.

The hidden therapist: evidence for a central role of music in psychedelic therapy

Psychopharmacology February 1, 2018 Mendel Kaelen, Bruna Giribaldi, Jordan Raine et al. 274 citations

Music plays a central therapeutic role in psychedelic therapy with psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression. In interviews with 19 patients, music had both welcome influences—evoking meaningful emotion, mental imagery, guidance, openness, calm, and safety—and unwelcome influences, such as unpleasant emotion, imagery, and resistance. Patients' experience of the music correlated with mystical experiences and insightfulness. Critically, the nature of the music experience significantly predicted reductions in depression one week after psilocybin, whereas general drug intensity did not.

Effects of psilocybin therapy on personality structure

Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica June 19, 2018 David Erritzøe, Leor Roseman, Matthew M. Nour et al. 268 citations

In patients with treatment-resistant depression, psilocybin therapy was associated with a decrease in neuroticism and increases in extraversion and openness three months later. These personality shifts moved toward normative population averages and were predicted by the degree of insight experienced during the psilocybin session. Conscientiousness showed trend-level increases, while agreeableness did not change. The pattern partly resembles changes seen with conventional antidepressants, but the pronounced rises in extraversion and openness may be more specific to psychedelic therapy.

DMT Models the Near-Death Experience

Frontiers in Psychology August 15, 2018 Christopher Timmermann, Leor Roseman, L. Williams et al. 228 citations

Near-death experiences (NDEs) share striking phenomenological similarities with the effects of the psychedelic drug DMT. In a placebo-controlled, within-subjects study, 13 healthy participants received DMT and placebo, then completed a standard NDE measure. DMT significantly increased NDE-like features compared to placebo. NDE scores were linked to DMT-induced ego-dissolution and mystical experiences, as well as baseline traits of absorption and delusional ideation. Nearly all NDE features overlapped between DMT-induced experiences and a matched group of actual NDE experiencers. These results indicate a remarkable similarity between the DMT state and NDEs, warranting further research.

Human brain effects of DMT assessed via EEG-fMRI.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America March 28, 2023 Christopher Timmermann, Leor Roseman, Sharad Haridas et al. 217 citations

Intravenous DMT, a potent psychedelic and serotonin 2A receptor agonist, profoundly alters brain function in healthy volunteers. In a placebo-controlled study with 20 participants, multimodal neuroimaging (EEG-fMRI) showed that DMT robustly increases global functional connectivity, disrupts and desegregates brain networks, and compresses the principal cortical gradient. These changes overlapped with brain regions rich in serotonin 2A receptors and associated with human-specific psychological functions. EEG and fMRI measures correlated, linking neurophysiological changes to network-level effects. The findings indicate DMT predominantly acts on the brain's transmodal association cortex, the evolutionarily recent area tied to advanced cognition and high 5-HT2A receptor density.

Therapeutic mechanisms of psilocybin: Changes in amygdala and prefrontal functional connectivity during emotional processing after psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression

Journal of Psychopharmacology January 16, 2020 Lea J. Mertens, Matthew B. Wall, Leor Roseman et al. 211 citations

After a single 25 mg dose of psilocybin, patients with treatment-resistant depression showed decreased functional connectivity between the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the right amygdala while viewing faces, particularly fearful and neutral ones. This decrease was linked to lower rumination levels one week later. Increased connectivity between these regions and occipital-parietal cortices also emerged. The findings suggest psilocybin therapy may revive emotional responsiveness at both neural and psychological levels, offering a potential treatment mechanism. Placebo-controlled studies are needed to confirm these results.

Psychedelics alter metaphysical beliefs.

Scientific reports November 23, 2021 Christopher Timmermann, Hannes Kettner, Chris Letheby et al. 208 citations

People who use psychedelic drugs often shift away from materialist views of reality and consciousness toward panpsychism and fatalism, with most changes lasting at least six months. In a large prospective online survey, these belief shifts correlated with greater past psychedelic use and improved mental health. Emotional synchrony with others during the experience mediated the changes, and baseline impressionability moderated them. An independent clinical trial confirmed the direction of belief change, suggesting psychedelics may causally influence metaphysical beliefs away from hard materialism, though contextual independence remains uncertain.

LSD alters dynamic integration and segregation in the human brain.

NeuroImage February 15, 2021 Andrea I Luppi, Robin L Carhart-Harris, Leor Roseman et al. 186 citations

LSD alters brain network dynamics non-uniformly over time, making globally segregated connectivity states more complex and weakening the link between functional and anatomical connectivity. The drug reduces functional connectivity in the anterior medial prefrontal cortex specifically during states of high segregation. Ego dissolution was predicted by increased small-world organization during a state of high global integration. These temporally-specific effects reveal a more nuanced picture of psychedelic-induced changes in brain connectivity and complexity than previously reported.

The Effects of Acutely Administered 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine on Spontaneous Brain Function in Healthy Volunteers Measured with Arterial Spin Labeling and Blood Oxygen Level–Dependent Resting State Functional Connectivity

Biological Psychiatry January 10, 2014 Robin Carhart‐Harris, Kevin Murphy, Robert Leech et al. 182 citations

The medial temporal lobes (MTLs) are specifically involved in how MDMA works in the brain, though more research is needed to understand how the drug's characteristic subjective effects emerge from its modulation of spontaneous brain activity.

The Watts Connectedness Scale: a new scale for measuring a sense of connectedness to self, others, and world

Psychopharmacology August 8, 2022 Rosalind Watts, Hannes Kettner, Dana Geerts et al. 159 citations

A new scale, the Watts Connectedness Scale (WCS), measures a three-dimensional sense of connectedness to self, others, and the wider world. Analysis of data from 1,226 participants in online surveys and a randomized controlled trial of 52 people with major depressive disorder showed the scale has good internal consistency and construct validity. After psychedelic use, total connectedness scores increased significantly, and acute experiences of mystical experience, emotional breakthrough, and communitas correlated with these changes. In the trial, psilocybin-assisted therapy produced greater increases in WCS scores than daily escitalopram. The WCS may sensitively capture therapeutically relevant psychological changes.

Receptor-informed network control theory links LSD and psilocybin to a flattening of the brain's control energy landscape.

Nature communications October 3, 2022 S Parker Singleton, Andrea I Luppi, Robin L Carhart-Harris et al. 156 citations

Psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin temporarily alter subjective experience by acting on serotonin 2a (5-HT2a) receptors, increasing the diversity (entropy) of brain activity. This increase may arise from a flattening of the brain's control energy landscape. Using fMRI data, the authors show that these compounds reduce the control energy needed for transitions between brain states compared to placebo. Across individuals, lower control energy correlates with more frequent state transitions and higher entropy. Incorporating PET data on 5-HT2a receptor distribution under non-drug conditions, the analysis links these receptors to reduced control energy. The findings demonstrate that receptor-informed network control theory can model how neuropharmacological manipulation affects brain dynamics.

Positive expectations predict improved mental-health outcomes linked to psychedelic microdosing

Scientific Reports January 21, 2021 Laura Kaertner, Michael B. Steinborn, Hannes Kettner et al. 152 citations

A prospective study of weekly psychedelic microdosing found that participants reported improved well-being, emotional stability, and reduced anxiety and depressive symptoms over four weeks. However, baseline positive expectancy scores predicted these improvements, suggesting a significant placebo response. The findings caution against overinterpreting the therapeutic value of microdosing.

Canalization and plasticity in psychopathology

Neuropharmacology December 27, 2022 Robin Carhart‐Harris, Shamil Chandaria, David Erritzøe et al. 106 citations

A theoretical model proposes that psychopathology arises from a defensive process called canalization, which narrows an individual's range of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors by increasing precision or reducing variance in neural responses. This contrasts with an early form of plasticity, TEMP (Temperature or Entropy Mediated Plasticity), which increases variance and learning rate. Canalization entrenches pathology as the agent develops expertise in their disorder, while TEMP, combined with gentle psychological support, may counter this entrenchment. The model distinguishes adaptive from maladaptive canalization and suggests concrete experiments to test its hypotheses.

Distributed harmonic patterns of structure-function dependence orchestrate human consciousness.

Communications biology January 28, 2023 Andrea I Luppi, Jakub Vohryzek, Morten L Kringelbach et al. 98 citations

Consciousness depends on how tightly brain function follows the brain's physical wiring. Using MRI scans, researchers measured structure-function coupling across spatial scales in people who were unconscious from anesthesia or brain injury and in people under psychedelics (LSD or ketamine). During loss of consciousness, function more closely tracked the brain's structural connections, a signature that could distinguish behaviorally similar brain-injured patients and detect covert consciousness. In contrast, psychedelics decoupled function from structure, and this decoupling correlated with physiological and subjective scores. The findings suggest that connectome harmonic decomposition reveals how neuromodulation and network architecture jointly shape consciousness.

Psychedelic therapy in the treatment of addiction: the past, present and future

Frontiers in Psychiatry June 12, 2023 Rayyan Zafar, Maxim Siegel, Rebecca Harding et al. 95 citations

Psychedelic therapy is regaining scientific and medical interest, with growing evidence for its safety and efficacy in treating psychiatric disorders, including addiction. This review charts research on these interventions for addiction, starting with the socioeconomic impact of addiction and current treatment options. It examines historical studies from the mid-late 1900s, real-world evidence from naturalistic and survey-based studies, and modern clinical trials from first-in-human to phase II. The review also covers translational neuropsychopharmacology techniques like fMRI and PET that help explain therapeutic mechanisms. A better understanding of these treatment effects can optimize psychedelic therapy development and improve patient outcomes.

The Psychedelic Renaissance in Clinical Research: A Bibliometric Analysis of Three Decades of Human Studies with Psychedelics.

Journal of psychoactive drugs January 1, 2023 Aviad Hadar, Jonathan David, Nadav Shalit et al. 93 citations

Psychedelics were used to treat psychiatric conditions before their prohibition in the late 1960s. Over the past three decades, research interest in their therapeutic potential has revived, with expected FDA approvals for various conditions. This bibliometric analysis characterized the top-cited 100 articles in the field, which were cited between 82 and 668 times (median 125; mean 158). Fifty-four percent of these articles were published in the last decade (2010-2020). Network and author impact analysis identified key figures and collaboration networks. The UK, USA, Switzerland, Spain, and Brazil lead the field. The findings facilitate research evaluation, data-driven funding policies, and a practical map for researchers and clinicians.

Serotonergic psychedelics LSD & psilocybin increase the fractal dimension of cortical brain activity in spatial and temporal domains

NeuroImage June 30, 2020 Thomas F. Varley, Robin Carhart‐Harris, Leor Roseman et al. 91 citations

Psychedelic drugs like psilocybin and LSD increase the fractal dimension of brain activity, suggesting that the brain moves toward a critical state between order and disorder. Using fMRI data from volunteers, the study tested two fractal measures: one for functional connectivity networks and one for BOLD time-series. Both drugs significantly increased the fractal dimension of functional connectivity networks. LSD also significantly increased the fractal dimension of BOLD signals, while psilocybin showed a non-significant trend in the same direction. Changes in the fractal dimension of BOLD signals were localized to brain areas in the dorsal attention network. These results indicate that psychedelic-induced changes in consciousness are associated with evolution toward a critical zone.

In vivo mapping of pharmacologically induced functional reorganization onto the human brain’s neurotransmitter landscape

Science Advances June 14, 2023 Leor Roseman, Christopher Timmermann, Daniel Golkowski et al. 65 citations

The effects of mind-altering drugs on brain function arise from complex interactions with multiple neurotransmitter systems, not just one. By linking the distribution of 19 neurotransmitter receptors and transporters (measured with PET) to changes in functional connectivity (measured with fMRI) caused by 10 drugs—anesthetics (propofol, sevoflurane, ketamine), psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, DMT, ayahuasca), and others (MDMA, modafinil, methylphenidate)—the work shows a many-to-many mapping between drug effects and neurotransmitter systems. The drugs' impacts follow hierarchical gradients of brain structure and function, and regional susceptibility to drug-induced changes mirrors susceptibility to structural alterations from brain disorders.

Effects of External Stimulation on Psychedelic State Neurodynamics.

ACS chemical neuroscience February 7, 2024 Pedro A M Mediano, Fernando E Rosas, Christopher Timmermann et al. 60 citations

LSD increases brain entropy (neural signal diversity) across all conditions, but the effect is strongest when eyes are closed. Brain entropy changes correlate with subjective psychedelic experience ratings, except when viewing a video, possibly because external stimuli compete with LSD-induced imagery. This shows context modulates neural dynamics during psychedelic experiences, highlighting the importance of environment in psychedelic psychotherapy.

More than meets the eye: The role of sensory dimensions in psychedelic brain dynamics, experience, and therapeutics.

Neuropharmacology February 1, 2023 Marco Aqil, Leor Roseman 59 citations

Psychedelics are experiencing a resurgence in scientific and clinical interest, but no universal agreement exists on the mechanisms behind their effects on subjective experience, brain dynamics, or therapeutic benefits. The effects of psychedelics on low-level sensory—particularly visual—dimensions and corresponding brain dynamics have often been dismissed as epiphenomenal byproducts. Reviewing evidence from neuroimaging, pharmacology, questionnaires, and clinical studies, the authors propose that psychedelic-induced alterations in low-level sensory dimensions are not entirely reducible to high-level alterations but co-occur in a dialogical interplay. These sensory changes likely play a causally relevant role in determining high-level alterations and therapeutic outcomes, suggesting that reevaluating sensory dimensions in psychedelic states is valuable for neuroscience and clinical practice.

Effects of psilocybin versus escitalopram on rumination and thought suppression in depression

BJPsych Open September 1, 2022 Tommaso Barba, Sarah Buehler, Hannes Kettner et al. 57 citations

Psilocybin, but not the antidepressant escitalopram, reduced rumination and thought suppression in people with major depressive disorder six weeks after treatment. In a randomized trial of 59 participants, only those given psilocybin showed significant decreases in both maladaptive coping strategies. Among treatment responders, thought suppression decreased exclusively in psilocybin responders, while rumination decreased in both psilocybin and escitalopram responders. Reductions in rumination and thought suppression correlated with ego dissolution and psychological insight during psilocybin sessions, suggesting distinct therapeutic mechanisms for the two treatments.