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Noam Goldway

Department of Psychiatry, NYU Langone Center for Psychedelic Medicine, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York (Pagni, Zeifman, Mennenga, Carrithers, Goldway, O'Donnell, Ross, Bogenschutz); School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe (Mennenga); Department of Psychology, New York University, New York (Goldway); Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque (Bhatt).

4 papers in the library · 28 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Multidimensional Personality Changes Following Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy in Patients With Alcohol Use Disorder: Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial

American Journal of Psychiatry January 1, 2025 Noam Goldway, Snehal Bhatt, Stephen Ross et al. 23 citations

Psilocybin-assisted therapy (PAT) produced lasting changes in personality, indicating a normalization of abnormal personality trait expression in people with alcohol use disorder. The findings suggest that PAT may reduce impulsiveness, or that impulsive individuals may inherently respond better to the therapy. Further research is needed to clarify the mechanism.

Stutterers' experiences on classic psychedelics: A preliminary self-report study.

Journal of fluency disorders September 1, 2024 Eric S Jackson, Noam Goldway, Hope Gerlach-Houck et al. 4 citations

Stuttering affects social, occupational, and educational functioning. Traditional therapies have limited effectiveness, and no FDA-approved pharmaceutical treatments exist. Interest in classic psychedelics (psilocybin, LSD) for conditions like anxiety and depression has grown, but their effects on stuttering were unexplored. This analysis of 114 Reddit posts from self-identified stutterers who used psychedelics found that 74.0% reported positive short-term effects, including reduced stuttering and anxiety. However, 9.6% reported negative effects, 4.8% mixed, and 11.6% neutral. The uncontrolled setting and potential adverse health effects require caution; results do not encourage use but suggest future controlled research.

Brain State Dynamics in Ketamine-Induced Dissociation Resemble Those in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

Biological psychiatry global open science March 1, 2026 Noam Goldway, Taly Markovits, Naomi Fine et al. 1 citation

Dissociation—feeling detached from one's body, environment, or self—often accompanies posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but its neural basis is poorly understood. Using network control theory on resting-state functional MRI data, researchers examined brain dynamics during dissociative states in healthy volunteers given ketamine (n=30) and in PTSD patients (n=78) before and after treatment. Ketamine induced brain dynamics similar to those in untreated PTSD patients: increased dominance of the default mode network (DMN) meta-state and decreased dominance of the somatomotor network (SOM) meta-state. After treatment, reduced DMN meta-state dominance correlated with fewer dissociative symptoms. Treated patients also showed more organized, less entropic brain states, though ketamine did not significantly alter entropy indices. Dissociative states, whether drug-induced or clinical, involve increased DMN and reduced SOM dominance.

Brain State Dynamics in Ketamine-Induced Dissociation Resemble Those in PTSD

Noam Goldway, Taly Markovits, Naomi Fine et al. preprint

Dissociation—feeling detached from one's body, surroundings, or self—is common in PTSD but its neural basis is poorly understood. Using network control theory, researchers examined brain dynamics during dissociative states in two contexts: ketamine-induced dissociation in 30 healthy volunteers and therapeutic interventions in 78 PTSD patients. Ketamine produced brain dynamics similar to those seen in PTSD patients before treatment, with increased dominance of a default mode network meta-state and decreased dominance of a somatomotor meta-state. Ketamine did not significantly alter the brain's energetic landscape, but transition energies increased after PTSD treatment, suggesting more organized, less entropic brain dynamics.