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David Sharp

Imperial College London

2 papers in the library · 508 citations · publishing 2012

Papers

Functional Connectivity Measures After Psilocybin Inform a Novel Hypothesis of Early Psychosis

Schizophrenia Bulletin October 6, 2012 Robin Carhart‐Harris, Robert Leech, David Erritzøe et al. 267 citations

Psilocybin, a classic psychedelic, increases functional connectivity between the default-mode network (DMN) and task-positive network (TPN), reducing the normal orthogonality between these networks. In 15 healthy volunteers, intravenous psilocybin (vs placebo) during resting-state fMRI scans led to greater DMN-TPN connectivity, a pattern also seen in psychosis and meditative states. Thalamocortical connectivity remained unchanged, suggesting it relates to arousal rather than the separateness of internal versus external focus. The findings support psilocybin as a model for early psychosis, where compromised DMN-TPN orthogonality may explain phenomenological overlaps.

Implications for psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy: functional magnetic resonance imaging study with psilocybin

The British Journal of Psychiatry January 27, 2012 Robin Carhart‐Harris, Robert Leech, Tom A. Williams et al. 241 citations

Psilocybin, a classic psychedelic drug, may enhance the vividness and visual imagery of positive autobiographical memories. In a small study of ten healthy participants, functional magnetic resonance imaging scans showed that under psilocybin, compared to placebo, recollection of positive memories produced additional visual and sensory cortical activations in the late phase of recall. Participants also rated memories as more vivid and visually rich after psilocybin, and higher vividness correlated with greater subjective wellbeing at follow-up. These findings suggest psilocybin could be useful in psychotherapy for facilitating recall of salient memories or reversing negative cognitive biases.