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Nicolás Bruno

Centro Científico Tecnológico - San Juan

4 papers in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2023-2026

Papers

Acute effects of psilocybin on the dynamics of gaze fixations during visual aesthetic perception

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) November 1, 2023 Stephanie Müller, Federico Cavanna, L. de la Fuente et al. 3 citations preprint

High doses of psilocybin mushrooms cause people to explore paintings with more local, less random eye movements, making their gaze patterns less entropic. Participants also reported stronger emotional responses and a greater state of flow under the high dose. These effects are consistent with psilocybin altering the perception of low-level visual features like textures, shapes, and colors. The findings demonstrate that eye-tracking under naturalistic conditions can objectively measure psychedelic-induced perceptual changes, supporting greater ecological validity.

Psilocybin-induced modulation of visual salience processing

Neuroscience of Consciousness January 1, 2025 Stephanie Muller, Federico Cavanna, Laura Alethia de la Fuente et al. 1 citation

Psilocybin alters how people process visual salience during natural scene perception, leading to more focused and exploratory gaze patterns. In a self-blinded study, 23 participants viewed natural scenes under low and high doses of psilocybin while their eye movements were tracked. Under the high dose, fixations concentrated more on salient image regions, inter-fixation distance decreased, and the Shannon entropy of fixations on high-saliency areas indicated more exploratory and less predictable scanning. Resting-state electroencephalography showed broadband spectral power reductions and increased Lempel-Ziv complexity, with delta power negatively correlating with salience metrics. These findings suggest psilocybin shifts attentional dynamics, heightening sensitivity to visual salience and altering gaze behavior.

Decoding the phenomenology of spontaneous thought using large language-model ratings on verbal retrospective free reports

bioRxiv Preprint Server April 22, 2026 Nicolás Bruno, Federico Cavanna, Federico Zamberlan et al. preprint

Spontaneous thoughts make up most of everyday inner experience, but studying them is difficult because traditional methods disrupt the natural flow of thinking or introduce motor artifacts. An alternative approach combined delayed verbal retrospective free reports with automated ratings from large language models. Twenty-two participants performed an eyes-closed free-thinking task, and their reports were evaluated on ten dimensions by four LLMs and human raters. Machine-learning models trained on EEG features achieved above-chance accuracy for predicting emotional valence. LLMs showed higher inter-rater agreement than humans, supporting their use for scalable annotation and suggesting that affective dimensions of spontaneous thoughts can be decoded from brain activity.

A Naturalistic Study on the Combined Neural and Psychological Effects of Psilocybin and Compassion Focused Imagery

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) December 22, 2025 Carla Pallavicini, Lorena Llobenes, Federico Cavanna et al.

Combining psilocybin with a compassion-focused imagery exercise produces long-term synergistic effects on cognitive absorption, self-compassion, and decentering. In a sample of 105 participants, those who received a compassion imagery prime before taking psilocybin showed distinct changes in brain network interactions—particularly among attentional, executive, and default mode networks—compared to those who simply focused on breathing. fMRI-based classifiers could distinguish the two priming conditions only at a high dose of psilocybin. The findings suggest that pairing psilocybin with compassion-based practices may amplify lasting psychological shifts and reorganize large-scale brain networks, though confirmatory studies are needed.