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Guy A. Higgins

University of Toronto

2 papers in the library · 68 citations · publishing 2021-2025

Papers

Low Doses of Psilocybin and Ketamine Enhance Motivation and Attention in Poor Performing Rats: Evidence for an Antidepressant Property

Frontiers in Pharmacology February 26, 2021 Guy A. Higgins, Nicole K. Carroll, Matthew A. Brown et al. 67 citations

Low doses of the hallucinogens ketamine and psilocybin, too small to cause perceptual effects, modestly improved motivation, attention, and impulse control in low-performing male rats. In two food-rewarded tasks, acute doses of ketamine (1–3 mg/kg) and psilocybin (0.05–0.1 mg/kg) increased break point for food and improved attentional accuracy. The benefits were small and mainly seen in rats that initially performed poorly. Both drugs produced similar patterns of effect. These findings support the idea that low, sub-perceptual doses of these drugs may have therapeutic potential for depression-related symptoms like anhedonia and cognitive dysfunction, though further research is needed.

Pharmacological characterisation of psilocybin and 5-MeO-DMT discriminative cues in the rat and their translational value for identifying novel psychedelics

Journal of Psychopharmacology August 27, 2025 Guy A. Higgins, Cam Macmillan, Inés de Lannoy et al. 1 citation

Drug discrimination procedures in rats confirm that hallucinogenic effects of psychedelics like psilocybin, LSD, DMT, and 5-MeO-DMT are mediated primarily by 5-HT2A and 5-HT1A receptors. Plasma levels of psilocin required for generalization in rats (5–52 ng/mL) overlapped with human perceptual effects, while DMT and LSD needed higher exposures in rats than in humans. The duration of drug-lever generalization followed LSD > psilocybin > 5-MeO-DMT ≥ DMT, matching clinical experience. LSD showed a disconnect between plasma exposure and generalization, similar to clinical findings. These results support the translational value of drug discrimination assays for studying psychedelics.