Brain, Belief, and Behaviour Lab, Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Innovation Village IV5, Cheetah Road, Coventry, CV1 2TL, UK. valerie.vanmulukom@coventry.ac.uk.
2 papers in the library · 61 citations · publishing 2020-2026
Classical serotonergic psychedelic (CSP) experiences that induce awe, but not ego dissolution, are linked to lower maladaptive narcissism through increased feelings of connectedness and affective empathetic drive. In a survey of 414 participants describing their most awe-inspiring psychedelic experience, those reporting more awe showed higher connectedness and empathy, which in turn predicted reduced exploitative-entitled narcissism. This relationship persisted after controlling for sensation-seeking. No evidence was found that ego dissolution produced the same effects. The findings suggest CSPs may have therapeutic potential for disorders involving deficits in connectedness and empathy, such as pathological narcissism, with awe-driven connectedness as a key mechanism.
Consciousness can be understood as a dynamic continuum between two self-states: a reflective, narrative mode supported by the default mode network, and an experiential, affective-salience mode anchored in the salience network (anterior insula and anterior cingulate cortex). The experiential self-state integrates interoceptive and exteroceptive signals into a coherent, non-propositional sense of being-here-as-subject, with sustained non-reflective meta-awareness. Within predictive processing, this state involves reduced precision-weighting of high-level self-referential priors, governed by dopaminergic, noradrenergic, and serotonergic mechanisms. This framework accounts for individual differences in mindfulness and absorption, and for conditions with dysregulated salience processing. Self-transcendent experiences—absorption, meditation, awe, mystical or religious experiences—are expressions of the experiential self-state.