Skip to content

Jonas Tt Schlomberg

2 papers in the library · 15 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Meditating on psychedelics. A randomized placebo-controlled study of DMT and harmine in a mindfulness retreat

Journal of Psychopharmacology September 27, 2024 Daniel Meling, Klemens Egger, Jovin Mueller et al. 15 citations

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study over a 3-day meditation retreat, 40 experienced meditators received either DMT-harmine or a placebo. Those who took DMT-harmine reported greater mystical-type experiences, non-dual awareness, and emotional breakthrough during the acute substance effects, and greater psychological insight one day later after adjusting for baseline differences. Mindfulness and compassion did not differ significantly between groups. At one-month follow-up, the DMT-harmine group rated their experience as more personally meaningful, spiritually significant, and well-being-enhancing than the placebo group. The findings suggest specific synergistic effects of DMT-harmine during meditation.

Complexity as a Potential Neurophysiological Correlate of Awe

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) November 21, 2025 Joseph C. C. Chen, Gabriella Mace, Avery Ostrand et al. preprint

Awe, a positive emotion linked to well-being and social behavior, was studied using EEG and autonomic physiology in 23 healthy older adults watching a nature film. Awe was the dominant emotion reported, though joy was also common. During awe events, skin conductance decreased, and EEG alpha and theta power decreased—changes associated with low arousal and positive emotion. Awe also increased Lempel Ziv Complexity (LZC), a measure of neural signal entropy linked to richer conscious experience. LZC correlated positively with awe intensity and negatively with skin conductance. Three additional datasets using different induction methods (video clips and DMT) showed similar occipital LZC increases, suggesting LZC may be a generalizable neurophysiological marker of awe.