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Matt Butler

Neuropsychiatry Research and Education Group, King's College London, London, England, UK.

5 papers in the library · 7 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Probing the functional magnetic resonance imaging response to psilocybin in functional neurological disorder (PsiFUND): study protocol.

Wellcome open research January 1, 2024 Matt Butler, Catherine Bird, Carolina Maggio et al. 4 citations

Functional neurological disorder (FND) causes seizures and movement disorders, is debilitating, and often has a poor prognosis. Brain imaging suggests FND involves multiple networks, and mechanisms like dissociation and abnormal motor agency may play a role. Psychedelics disrupt brain networks and are being tested for neuropsychiatric disorders. This open-label neuroimaging study will give 25 mg oral psilocybin with psychological support to 24 people with chronic FND. Resting-state and task-based fMRI, plus measures of interoception, somatisation, and dissociation, will be collected before and after psilocybin, with three-month follow-up. The study aims to probe FND mechanisms and assess safety and feasibility of psychedelic administration in this population.

How to set up a psychedelic study: Unique considerations for research involving human participants.

Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews July 1, 2026 Marcus J Glennon, Catherine I V Bird, Prateek Yadav et al. 2 citations

Setting up a psychedelic research study involves a long, arduous, and Kafkaesque process with many unstandardised challenges. These complexities challenge existing assumptions about psychiatric prescribing, the placebo effect, and definitions of selfhood. This review brings together major UK psychedelic research teams to formalise these unique considerations, addressing sociocultural, political, legal, pharmacological, safety, study design, and experiential facets. It identifies continuing areas of debate and provides a practical, experience-based guide with recommendations for policymakers and future researchers intending to set up a psychedelic study or clinical trial.

Characterising the clinical associations of hallucinogen persisting perception disorder: a retrospective cohort study

Translational Psychiatry April 24, 2026 Matt Butler, Ellen Moore, James Rucker et al. 1 citation

Hallucinogen persisting perception disorder (HPPD) involves episodes of altered perception after past psychoactive drug use, causing distress and impairment. In a large retrospective cohort study using electronic health records from 25,778 individuals diagnosed with HPPD, high rates of prior comorbidities were found, including depressive episodes (29.2%), anxiety disorders (26.2%), chronic pain (15.9%), headache syndromes (14.7%), post-viral fatigue (12.3%), ADHD (6.6%), and fibromyalgia (6.7%). Anxiety and functional somatic syndromes were more common in HPPD patients than in psychedelic-using controls. Anxiety (odds ratio 1.5) and post-viral fatigue (odds ratio 1.9) predicted HPPD development among psychedelic users. After diagnosis, HPPD was associated with increased risk of subsequent functional somatic syndromes (odds ratio 2.0) and psychiatric disorders (odds ratio 1.4) compared to psychedelic-using controls.

Tripping on context: Characteristics and predictors of placebo and nocebo psychedelic effects

medRxiv Preprint Server May 31, 2026 Madeline V. Stein, Matt Butler, Sarah Chapman et al. preprint

Context alone can produce psychedelic-like effects, even without an active drug. In a placebo experiment, 78 healthy participants inhaled inert medical air. When told it was nitrous oxide, they reported increased altered states of consciousness, ego dissolution, dissociation, and side effects, compared to when the gas was correctly identified as air. Time perception was not significantly affected. The strength of placebo-induced effects was predicted by individual traits of responsiveness to verbal suggestion and absorption. These results demonstrate that the context of drug administration plays a causal role in shaping psychedelic experiences.

How to set up a psychedelic study: Unique considerations for research involving human participants

arXiv Preprint Archive March 28, 2025 Marcus J. Glennon, Catherine I. V. Bird, Prateek Yadav et al.

Setting up a psychedelic study is a long and complex process that presents unique challenges not yet standardized. This review brings together major UK research teams to formalize these considerations, identify ongoing debates, and provide a practical guide for researchers and policymakers. It addresses challenges to existing assumptions about psychiatric prescribing, the placebo effect, and definitions of selfhood. The paper can be read end-to-end or used as a manual with sections for specific needs.