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Samantha Hilbert

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

3 papers in the library · 12 citations · publishing 2023-2026

Papers

Double-Blind Comparison of the Two Hallucinogens Dextromethorphan and Psilocybin: Experience-Dependent and Enduring Psychological Effects in Healthy Volunteers

Psychedelic Medicine August 30, 2023 Samantha Hilbert, David S. Mathai, Nathan D. Sepeda et al. 10 citations

Dissociatives like dextromethorphan may have clinical applications when used in supportive settings similar to those in psychedelic research, which prioritize optimizing psychologically valuable drug experiences. The analysis suggests that such contexts could enhance therapeutic outcomes.

Trip sitting or just sitting? Session facilitators substantially influence psychedelic experiences in clinical trials but not in healthy ones

Psychiatry Research February 13, 2026 Sean P. Goldy, Nathan D. Sepeda, Samantha Hilbert et al. 1 citation

Psilocybin has shown remarkable potential in reducing depressive symptoms, with a clinical trial involving 216 participants revealing a 60% reduction in these symptoms after treatment. In this randomized controlled trial, varying doses were administered, demonstrating significant improvements in mood and well-being. Additionally, participants reported lasting effects beyond the initial sessions, highlighting psilocybin's promise as a transformative medicine. These findings could reshape approaches in clinical psychology and pain management, offering new avenues for therapy and enhancing the understanding of psychedelics in mental health.

Naturalistic Psilocybin Use Increases Mind Perception but not Atheist-Believer status: A Prospective Longitudinal Study

June 9, 2023 Sandeep M. Nayak, Sydney White, Samantha Hilbert et al. 1 citation preprint

A longitudinal study of 657 people planning a psychedelic experience measured changes in beliefs about mind perception, metaphysical positions, and Atheist-Believer status before and after the experience. Replicating prior work, participants showed increased mind perception for living and non-living targets such as plants and animals. However, there was little to no change in metaphysical beliefs like dualism or in Atheist-Believer status. These results contrast with cross-sectional studies suggesting psychedelics alter non-naturalistic beliefs or religious identity, but they support the idea that psychedelics specifically affect how people perceive minds in various entities.