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Davide Bottari

2 papers in the library · 5 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Ayahuasca-inspired DMT/HAR formulation reduces brain differentiation between self and other faces.

NeuroImage June 1, 2025 Dila Suay, Helena D Aicher, Micheal Kometer et al. 4 citations

A psychedelic formulation combining DMT and harmine, inspired by ayahuasca, altered brain responses to faces in 30 healthy men. It increased early visual reactivity (P1 wave) and disrupted face-structural encoding (N170 wave) for all face types. Crucially, it reduced the neural distinction between self and other faces in the P300 wave, while familiar-face processing remained stable. Harmine alone did not produce these effects. The findings suggest psychedelics can reorganize self-related neural dynamics, potentially promoting cognitive flexibility and offering therapeutic benefits for conditions involving rigid self-focus, such as depression and social anxiety.

Ayahuasca-Inspired DMT/HAR Formulation Reduces Brain Differentiation Between Self and Other Faces

medRxiv November 1, 2024 Dila Suay, Helena D. Aicher, Micheal Kometer et al. 1 citation preprint

A psychedelic formulation combining DMT and harmine, inspired by ayahuasca, blurs the brain's distinction between self and other faces. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment with 31 healthy men, the DMT/harmine combination increased early visual brain responses (P1 amplitude) and disrupted the structural encoding of faces (reduced N170 amplitude) for all face types. It also specifically reduced the brain's later response (P300) to one's own face, making the neural reaction to self-faces more similar to that for familiar or unknown faces. Harmine alone did not produce these effects. The findings suggest psychedelics may reduce attentional focus on self-referential information, potentially explaining feelings of unity and enhanced empathy.