NeuroImage
October 3, 2017
Federico Cavanna, Martina G. Vilas, Matías Palmucci et al.
151 citations
A review of dynamic neuroimaging research suggests that the brain's spontaneous activity fluctuates in a non-trivial, structured way, compatible with exploring a discrete repertoire of states. This supports the hypothesis of a dynamic core—a constantly evolving but transiently stable set of coordinated neurons that forms the physical substrate for each conscious experience. Studies indicate that metastability in brain dynamics may underlie this repertoire and that it can be modified during altered states of consciousness. The review proposes that linking metastability to the level of consciousness could lead to a mechanistic understanding of altered states using dynamical systems theory and statistical physics.
Translational Psychiatry
August 2, 2022
Federico Cavanna, Stephanie Müller, Laura Alethia de la Fuente et al.
130 citations
A double-blind placebo-controlled trial tested the effects of a low (0.5 g) dose of dried psilocybin mushrooms on 34 individuals beginning a microdosing protocol. The active dose produced more intense acute subjective effects than placebo, but only among participants who correctly guessed their condition. These effects coincided with reduced EEG theta-band power and preserved Lempel-Ziv broadband signal complexity. No evidence was found for enhanced well-being, creativity, or cognitive function; instead, small changes toward cognitive impairment appeared. The findings suggest that expectation, not the drug itself, accounts for many anecdotal benefits attributed to psilocybin microdosing.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
December 7, 2021
Federico Cavanna, Stephanie Müller, Laura Alethia de la Fuente et al.
8 citations
preprint
A double-blind placebo-controlled trial tested the effects of a low (0.5 g) sub-hallucinogenic dose of dried psilocybin mushrooms in 34 individuals planning to microdose. Acute subjective effects were significantly stronger with the active dose than with placebo, possibly due to unblinding. For other measures—including creativity, perception, cognition, and brain activity—the results were null or showed a trend toward cognitive impairment and, in electroencephalography, reduced theta band spectral power. These findings suggest that expectation effects may account for some of the anecdotal benefits people report from microdosing psilocybin.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
February 22, 2022
Camila Sanz, Federico Cavanna, Stephanie Müller et al.
1 citation
preprint
Low doses of psilocybin (microdoses) can be detected in natural speech. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment, participants given 0.5 g of psilocybin mushrooms showed significant differences in verbosity and sentiment scores compared to placebo, though semantic variability did not differ. Machine learning classifiers using these speech metrics distinguished between the psilocybin and placebo conditions with high accuracy (AUC≈0.8). These findings suggest that unconstrained natural language may serve as a practical, low-cost tool for monitoring microdosing effects, addressing limitations of existing questionnaires designed for larger psychedelic doses.