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James W Sanders

DMT Research Group, Centre for Psychedelic Research, Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, London W12 0NN, UK.

2 papers in the library · 19 citations · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

Exploring 5-MeO-DMT as a pharmacological model for deconstructed consciousness.

Neuroscience of consciousness January 1, 2025 Christopher Timmermann, James W Sanders, David Reydellet et al. 19 citations

The psychedelic 5-MeO-DMT can, in its most extreme cases, produce a complete absence of self-experience and other perceptual content while preserving a quality of aroused, waking awareness. In an exploratory observational study in naturalistic ceremonial settings, micro-phenomenological interviews, questionnaires, and EEG recordings revealed a dynamic progression of effects, including variable disruptions of bodily and narrative self, reduced phenomenal distinctions, and visual imagery. EEG showed global alpha and posterior beta power reductions, suggesting inhibition of top-down brain models. The findings indicate 5-MeO-DMT's potential as a pharmacological model for deconstructed consciousness, though retrospective questionnaires have limitations.

Micro-phenomenology of immersion and perceived presences under DMT.

Neuroscience of consciousness January 1, 2026 James W Sanders, Raphaël Millière, Ema Demšar et al.

The psychedelic compound DMT induces highly immersive experiences that often include encounters with seemingly sentient presences. Using micro-phenomenology, immersion under DMT was characterized as a structured continuum from subtle to gross forms. Twenty-three participants received 20 mg intravenous DMT during fMRI-EEG, followed by detailed interviews. Analysis yielded 125 phenomenological categories describing structural dimensions like sensory faculties, spatial organization, and self-world configuration. Bodily effects typically preceded visual and auditory ones, and perceived presences emerged only after multisensory integration and 3D spatial characteristics had developed, illustrating a hierarchical relationship between subtle and gross immersion. Perceived presences varied widely in sensory modality, semantic complexity, and relational mode, showing immersion as a dynamic, constructive process.