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Alexander J. Simon

Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States

1 paper in the library · 1 citation · publishing 2025

Papers

Dynamic medial parietal and hippocampal deactivations under DMT relate to sympathetic output and altered sense of time, space, and the self

Imaging Neuroscience April 16, 2025 Lorenzo Pasquini, Alexander J. Simon, Courtney L. Gallen et al. 1 citation

DMT rapidly induces a short-lasting altered state of consciousness marked by physical transcendence, vivid auditory distortions, and visual imagery. Using simultaneous fMRI and EKG data from 14 healthy volunteers before, during, and after intravenous DMT or placebo, a brain substate emerged immediately after DMT injection, characterized by deactivations in the hippocampus and medial parietal cortex and increased activity in the superior temporal lobe. Hippocampal and medial parietal deactivations correlated with altered sense of time, space, and self-referential processes, reflecting a deconstruction of ordinary consciousness. Superior temporal lobe activations correlated with audio/visual hallucinations and the experience of "entities.