A systematic review of psilocybin research organized by the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework found that psilocybin has beneficial effects across multiple domains, particularly on positive valence systems, negative valence systems, and social processes. Short-term (23 assessments) and long-term (15 assessments) benefits were reported for positive valence systems. For the negative valence system, 12 outcome measures indicated increased fear, 19 showed no significant effect, and 7 parameters indicated lowered sustained threat over the long term. Thirty-four outcome measures revealed short-term alterations in social systems, including enhanced perception and understanding of others and affiliation. Cognitive systems findings mostly reported dyscognitive effects. Seven studies suggested transdiagnostic effects.
A review of 28 clinical studies with 477 participants examined how lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) affects reward processing, using the National Institute of Mental Health's Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework. LSD produced dose-dependent mood improvement in 20 short-term and 3 long-term studies. Its subjective and neural effects were linked to the 5-HT2A receptor. Animal studies suggested LSD could mildly reinforce conditioned place preference without aversion and reduce responsiveness to other rewards. Findings on reward learning were inconsistent but hinted at potential enhancements in associative learning. Reward valuation measures indicated possible reductions in effort expenditure for other reinforcers. The review identified areas for future research but noted limitations including diverse study designs not initially RDoC-oriented and potential bias from open-label human studies.