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Kate Godfrey

Centre for Psychedelic Research, Division of Psychiatry, Department of Brain Science, Imperial College of London, UK.

17 papers in the library · 177 citations · publishing 2023-2025

Papers

Acute Mood-Elevating Properties of Microdosed Lysergic Acid Diethylamide in Healthy Volunteers: A Home-Administered Randomized Controlled Trial.

Biological psychiatry September 15, 2023 Robin J Murphy, Rachael Sumner, William Evans et al. 69 citations

Microdosing LSD (10 μg every three days for six weeks) in healthy adult men produced transient improvements in creativity, connectedness, energy, happiness, irritability, and wellness on dose days compared with nondose days, even after controlling for preintervention expectancy. However, no enduring changes in overall mood or cognition were observed between baseline and six-week assessments. The most notable adverse event was treatment-related anxiety, which led four participants in the LSD group to withdraw. Microdosing appears relatively safe in this population but does not support claims of lasting mood or cognitive benefits.

Neuroplasticity and psychedelics: A comprehensive examination of classic and non-classic compounds in pre and clinical models

Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews April 4, 2025 Claudio Agnorelli, Kate Godfrey, Gabriela Sawicka et al. 32 citations

Classic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, N,N-DMT) and non-classic psychedelics (ketamine, MDMA) enhance neuroplasticity—the nervous system's ability to adapt—through molecular, structural, and functional changes. Animal studies indicate these drugs induce meta-plasticity (heightened sensitivity to environmental stimuli) and hyper-plasticity (re-opening developmental windows for long-term structural changes), with implications for mood and behavior. Translating these findings to humans faces challenges due to limitations in current imaging techniques, but promising new directions include novel PET radioligands, non-invasive brain stimulation, and multimodal approaches. This review informs the development of targeted interventions for neuropsychiatric disorders.

Single-dose (10 mg) psilocybin reduces symptoms in adults with obsessive-compulsive disorder: A pharmacological challenge study.

Comprehensive psychiatry July 1, 2025 Luca Pellegrini, Naomi A Fineberg, Sorcha O'Connor et al. 17 citations

A 10 mg dose of psilocybin produced a rapid, moderate-to-large reduction in compulsive symptoms in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), lasting up to one week after dosing. In a blinded pharmacological challenge study, 18 adults with at least moderate OCD received a 1 mg and then a 10 mg dose of oral psilocybin, separated by four weeks. One week after the 10 mg dose, scores on the compulsion subscale of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale showed a significant improvement compared to the 1 mg dose (Cohen's d = 0.74). No effect on depression was detected. The drug was well tolerated with no serious adverse events.

Modulation of long-term potentiation following microdoses of LSD captured by thalamo-cortical modelling in a randomised, controlled trial.

BMC neuroscience February 5, 2024 Robin J Murphy, Kate Godfrey, Alexander D Shaw et al. 16 citations

Microdosing psychedelics is claimed to improve cognition, but clinical evidence is limited. In a placebo-controlled trial, 80 healthy adult males took 10 µg of LSD or placebo every third day for six weeks. A visual long-term potentiation (LTP) EEG paradigm measured neural plasticity indirectly. Standard event-related potential (ERP) analyses of N1b and P2 components showed no evidence of changes in LTP from LSD, either acutely or after six weeks. However, dynamic causal modeling of the ERP timecourse using a thalamocortical model revealed changes in laminar connectivity in primary visual cortex, including acute changes to self-gain and inhibitory input parameters and differences in excitatory connectivity from layer 2/3 to layer 5 between...

Study protocol for “Psilocybin in patients with fibromyalgia: brain biomarkers of action”

Frontiers in Psychiatry June 4, 2024 Julia Bornemann, James B Close, Kirran Ahmad et al. 11 citations

Psilocybin-assisted therapy may help treat fibromyalgia, a chronic widespread pain condition with limited treatment options. A protocol describes a mechanistic study with 20 participants who will attend 8 visits over 8 weeks, including two dosing sessions where psilocybin is given at least once, with doses up to 25 mg. The primary focus is on brain mechanisms, measured via electroencephalography during the acute psychedelic state and magnetic resonance imaging before and after treatment. Primary outcomes are Lempel-Ziv complexity from EEG and experiential avoidance via questionnaire. Secondary measures include pain, physical and mental function, and additional neuroimaging. Results aim to clarify how psilocybin-therapy works in the brain and inform a future randomized controlled trial.

Multimodal creativity assessments following acute and sustained microdosing of lysergic acid diethylamide.

Psychopharmacology February 1, 2025 Robin J Murphy, Rachael L Sumner, Kate Godfrey et al. 9 citations

A randomized controlled trial gave 80 healthy adult males 10 µg doses of LSD or placebo every third day for six weeks and tested creativity with the Alternate Uses Test, Remote Associates Task, Consensual Assessment Technique, and an Everyday Problem-Solving Questionnaire. No drug effect was found on any creativity measure at the first dose or after six weeks, despite participants reporting feeling more creative on dose days. Baseline vocabulary skill significantly influenced scores on two tests. The null findings may reflect that laboratory testing misses naturalistic creative differences, available tests do not capture the facets of creativity anecdotally affected, or reported enhancements are placebo effects.

Neurophysiological correlates of ketamine-induced dissociative state in bipolar disorder: insights from real-world clinical settings.

Molecular psychiatry January 14, 2025 Claudio Agnorelli, Alessandra Cinti, Giovanni Barillà et al. 8 citations

In patients with bipolar disorder and treatment-resistant depression, a subanesthetic dose of ketamine alters brain activity patterns measured by EEG. Ketamine reduced low-frequency power and increased gamma oscillatory power, flattened the slope of power spectra, and increased brain signal entropy, especially in high-frequency bands. Patients who responded later to treatment showed greater EEG changes than early responders, suggesting underlying differences in treatment sensitivity. These neurophysiological effects may help explain ketamine's therapeutic mechanisms and could guide personalized treatment for mood disorders.

An investigation of acute physiological and psychological moderators of psychedelic-induced personality change among healthy volunteers

Neuroscience Applied December 2, 2024 Kate Godfrey, Brandon Weiss, Joseph Peill et al. 5 citations

A single high dose of psilocybin (25 mg) given to healthy volunteers who had never used psychedelics reduced neuroticism one month later, consistent with prior research. The reduction was linked to how meaningful the experience felt and to the dread of ego dissolution during the drug's acute effects. Personality was measured with the Big Five Inventory and Big Five Aspect Scale; acute effects were tracked with the Altered States of Consciousness questionnaire and Psychological Insight Scale. Electroencephalography measured alpha power and Lempel-Ziv complexity. The findings suggest that acute psychedelic states can catalyze lasting personality changes in a beneficial direction, with implications for therapy and understanding personality.

Experienced meditators show greater forward traveling cortical alpha wave strengths.

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences July 2, 2025 Neil W Bailey, Aron T Hill, Kate Godfrey et al. 4 citations

Mindfulness meditation, which trains attention on sensory experiences with nonjudgmental awareness, is thought to sharpen sensory processing and reduce top-down expectations. This study measured forward and backward traveling cortical alpha waves—proposed to reflect bottom-up inhibition and top-down inhibition, respectively—using electroencephalography in meditators and nonmeditators. During eyes-closed resting (97 participants) and a visual Go/No-go task (126 participants), meditators showed stronger forward traveling waves than nonmeditators in both conditions, and weaker backward traveling waves during rest. These neural differences may underlie enhanced attention and reduced mind-wandering associated with meditation, supporting models where mental training increases sensory awareness.

Study Protocol for ‘PsilOCD: A Pharmacological Challenge Study Evaluating the Effects of the 5-HT2A Agonist Psilocybin on the Neurocognitive and Clinical Correlates of Compulsivity’

Cureus January 29, 2025 Sorcha O'Connor, Kate Godfrey, Sara Reed et al. 2 citations

The study aims to uncover the neural mechanisms by which psilocybin-assisted therapy affects obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and whether those brain changes align with improvements in cognitive symptoms. A secondary goal is to test whether a low, tolerable dose is both practical and effective as a clinical treatment. The results will provide essential data for designing a future randomized controlled trial.

Neuroplasticity and Psychedelics: a comprehensive examination of classic and non-classic compounds in pre and clinical models

arXiv (Cornell University) November 29, 2024 Claudio Agnorelli, Meg J. Spriggs, Kate Godfrey et al. 2 citations

Classic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, N,N-DMT) and non-classic psychedelics (ketamine, MDMA) enhance neuroplasticity, the nervous system's ability to adapt. Animal studies indicate these drugs induce meta-plasticity, heightening sensitivity to environmental stimuli, and hyper-plasticity, reopening developmental windows for long-term structural changes that affect mood and behavior. Translating these findings to humans is challenged by limitations in current imaging techniques, but emerging approaches like novel PET radioligands, non-invasive brain stimulation, and multimodal methods offer promising directions. This review informs development of targeted interventions for neuropsychiatric disorders and advances understanding of psychedelics' therapeutic potential.

Effects of psychedelics on human oscillatory brain activity.

International review of neurobiology January 1, 2025 Kate Godfrey, Lisa X Luan, Christopher Timmermann 1 citation

Classic psychedelics like LSD, psilocybin, ayahuasca, and DMT consistently reduce alpha power (8-13 Hz) in occipital regions, as measured by resting-state EEG and MEG. Below 30 Hz, desynchronization is typical, though DMT can preserve or increase delta/theta activity. Measures of signal diversity, such as Lempel-Ziv complexity, reliably increase during psychedelic states, indicating more variable neural firing. Real-time subjective intensity and plasma levels robustly covary with spectral and complexity changes, suggesting potential for real-time EEG biomarkers. Limited research on functional connectivity and cortical travelling waves hints at decreased top-down control and increased bottom-up signaling, a possible transient reversal of hierarchical organization, but replications are needed. EEG has yet to be evaluated in clinical studies.

Detecting neuroplastic effects induced by ketamine in healthy human subjects: a multimodal approach

bioRxiv Preprint Server May 1, 2025 Claudio Agnorelli, Joseph Peill, Gabriela Sawicka et al. preprint

A single psychedelic dose of ketamine (1 mg/kg, intravenous) alters brain chemistry and connectivity in healthy people for at least one to eight days. After the dose, glutamate levels in the anterior cingulate cortex rose significantly. Functional connectivity decreased within high-order networks such as the default mode network, while integration between low- and high-order networks increased. Increases in a PET marker of synaptic plasticity correlated with reduced intrinsic activity in default mode network regions and a diminished influence of the posterior cingulate cortex on global network dynamics. The posterior cingulate cortex appears to be a central hub through which ketamine may reshape brain hierarchies over the long term.

Correction: Study Protocol for 'PsilOCD: A Pharmacological Challenge Study Evaluating the Effects of the 5-HT2A Agonist Psilocybin on the Neurocognitive and Clinical Correlates of Compulsivity'.

Cureus January 1, 2025 Sorcha O'Connor, Kate Godfrey, Sara Reed et al. correction

A protocol describes a planned study testing whether a low-moderate dose of psilocybin (10 mg), combined with non-interventional therapy, can improve cognitive flexibility and neuroplasticity in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Twenty blinded participants will receive an active placebo (1 mg psilocybin) in a first session and 10 mg in a second session four weeks later. Cognitive flexibility will be measured with the intradimensional-extradimensional shift task two days after each session, and neuroplasticity will be assessed via electroencephalography immediately after each session. Secondary outcomes include OCD symptom severity and patient-reported measures. The results are expected to clarify neural mechanisms and guide a future randomized controlled trial.

Human brain changes after first psilocybin use

October 14, 2024 Terence J. Lyons, Merle Spriggs, Leevi Kerkelä et al. preprint

A single high dose of psilocybin (25 mg) produced lasting functional and anatomical brain changes in healthy, psychedelic-naive adults, detected from one hour to one month later. Diffusion imaging showed decreased axial diffusivity in prefrontal-subcortical tracts, correlating with reduced brain network modularity, which in turn correlated with improved well-being. Increased cortical signal entropy shortly after dosing predicted better psychological well-being at one month, with next-day psychological insight mediating this relationship. No such effects occurred with a 1 mg placebo dose. Cognitive flexibility, psychological insight, and well-being also increased at one month.

Neuroplasticity and Psychedelics: a comprehensive examination of classic and non-classic compounds in pre and clinical models

arXiv Preprint Archive November 29, 2024 Claudio Agnorelli, Meg Spriggs, Kate Godfrey et al.

Psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin can rewire brain connections after just one dose, unlike traditional psychiatric medications. These compounds boost the brain's natural plasticity, helping neurons form new pathways and adapt to change. Studies show they create a window of enhanced learning and adaptation, leading to lasting improvements in mood and behavior.