Psychopharmacology
September 2, 2016
Will Lawn, Tom P. Freeman, Rebecca Pope et al.
177 citations
Cannabis containing only THC reduced the likelihood of choosing high-effort rewards compared to placebo, indicating a transient amotivational state, while adding CBD altered the effect of THC on expected value. Cannabis-dependent individuals showed preserved motivation but impaired reward learning compared to non-dependent controls, though depression may have influenced results.
American Journal of Psychiatry
January 11, 2022
Meryem Grabski, Amy Mcandrew, Will Lawn et al.
169 citations
Three weekly infusions of ketamine (0.8 mg/kg) helped people with severe alcohol use disorder stay abstinent more days over six months than placebo infusions did. The ketamine group averaged 10.1% more days abstinent than the placebo group. Combining ketamine with mindfulness-based relapse prevention therapy produced the largest improvement, with 15.9% more abstinent days compared with placebo plus alcohol education. No serious adverse events occurred. Relapse rates did not differ significantly between ketamine and placebo groups. The findings suggest ketamine is safe and may support abstinence, especially when paired with psychological therapy.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
April 23, 2019
Matthew B. Wall, Rebecca Pope, Tom P. Freeman et al.
89 citations
Two strains of cannabis—one containing only THC (8 mg) and another containing THC plus CBD (8 mg THC + 10 mg CBD)—were compared with placebo in seventeen healthy, experienced but non-regular cannabis users. Using resting-state fMRI, both strains reduced functional connectivity in the default mode and salience networks relative to placebo, but with distinct spatial patterns. The THC-only strain specifically disrupted the posterior cingulate cortex within the default mode network, and this disruption correlated with subjective feelings of being 'stoned' and 'high'. The THC-plus-CBD strain produced less disruption of the salience network, suggesting CBD may buffer THC's effects on salience processing, which could underlie its potential therapeutic role in disorders like psychosis and addiction.
Scientific Reports
November 3, 2017
Will Lawn, Jaime E. C. Hallak, José Alexandre S. Crippa et al.
78 citations
Ayahuasca users reported greater well-being than both classic psychedelic users and non-psychedelic drug users, and less problematic drinking than classic psychedelic users, though both psychedelic groups reported more problematic drinking than non-psychedelic users. Ayahuasca's acute subjective effects typically lasted six hours, peaking one hour after consumption. These findings come from a large online survey of nearly 97,000 respondents, including 527 ayahuasca users. The authors call for longitudinal studies and randomized trials to further investigate ayahuasca's effects on well-being and alcohol use.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology
August 30, 2017
Tom P. Freeman, Rebecca Pope, Matthew B. Wall et al.
67 citations
Cannabis dampens the brain's response to music in regions involved in reward and emotion, including the auditory cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, and ventral striatum. However, when cannabis also contains cannabidiol, these dampening effects are offset, and brain activity does not differ from placebo. Despite reduced neural responses, both types of cannabis increased participants' self-reported desire to listen to music and enhanced sound perception. The findings suggest that cannabidiol may mitigate some of cannabis's effects on brain reward systems.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
May 18, 2015
Sunjeev K. Kamboj, Emma J. Kilford, Stephanie Minchin et al.
43 citations
MDMA (ecstasy) and compassionate imagery both increase self-compassion and reduce self-criticism in recreational users. In a non-blind experiment, participants who consumed ecstasy showed similar pro-social effects to those produced by a contemplative compassion exercise, particularly in those with higher attachment-related avoidance. The findings suggest MDMA may enhance psychotherapy by fostering compassionate attitudes toward oneself. However, because the study was not blinded and drug purity was unknown, controlled trials with pharmaceutical-grade MDMA are needed to confirm these effects.
Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences
November 15, 2016
Celia J. A. Morgan, Amy Mcandrew, Tobias Stevens et al.
41 citations
No Summary
J Psychopharmacol
June 15, 2020
Anna Borissova, Bart Ferguson, Matthew B Wall et al.
37 citations
MDMA did not increase prosocial behavior in a controlled laboratory setting, despite raising blood levels of the drug and self-reported feelings of closeness and euphoria. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment with 20 healthy volunteers, MDMA (100 mg) failed to significantly change task-based measures of empathy, trust, or cooperative behavior compared to placebo. Bayesian analyses supported the conclusion that MDMA and placebo had equivalent effects on empathy and cooperation. The drug also did not alter mood three days after administration. These findings suggest that the acute prosocial effects of MDMA observed in naturalistic or therapeutic contexts may not replicate under controlled experimental conditions.
Psychological Medicine
April 28, 2020
Claire Mokrysz, Natacha D. C. Shaban, Tom P. Freeman et al.
24 citations
Inhaling cannabis reliably increases psychotic-like symptoms in healthy cannabis users and may raise the incidence of speech illusion—hearing words in meaningless white noise. Cannabidiol (CBD) did not blunt these effects. In one study, adults had stronger psychotic-like symptom responses than adolescents, suggesting adolescents may be less vulnerable to the acute psychotic-like effects of cannabis. The odds of experiencing speech illusion were 3.1 times higher after inhaling cannabis with THC and negligible CBD compared to placebo.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
August 5, 2020
Will Lawn, J. P. Hill, Chandni Hindocha et al.
23 citations
A single 600 mg oral dose of cannabidiol did not alter brain activity related to anticipating or receiving rewards in healthy adults. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging during a monetary incentive delay task, the expected reward-related brain regions—including the insula, caudate, nucleus accumbens, anterior cingulate, and orbitofrontal cortex—were activated, but no difference was observed between cannabidiol and placebo. Bayesian analyses confirmed that activity in these regions was similar under both conditions, and behavioral measures of motivation for reward also showed no significant difference. The findings suggest that acute cannabidiol does not affect the neural correlates of reward anticipation or feedback in healthy individuals.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
May 20, 2022
Matthew B. Wall, Tom P. Freeman, Chandni Hindocha et al.
21 citations
THC strongly disrupts connectivity between the striatum and cortex, but co-administering CBD mitigates this effect in the limbic striatum network. In one study, inhaled cannabis with 8 mg THC or 8 mg THC plus 10 mg CBD disrupted associative and sensorimotor networks, while THC alone also disrupted the limbic striatum network. In a second study, oral 600 mg CBD increased connectivity in the associative network and caused minor disruptions in limbic and sensorimotor networks. The insula emerges as a key region affected by cannabinoid-induced changes in functional connectivity, with implications for understanding cannabis-related disorders and developing cannabinoid therapeutics.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
November 21, 2020
Matthew B. Wall, Tom P. Freeman, Chandni Hindocha et al.
4 citations
preprint
Cannabidiol (CBD) and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) are two major cannabis constituents with contrasting actions: THC is psychoactive and addiction-promoting, while CBD may have opposite effects. In two placebo-controlled, double-blind studies, inhaled THC (8 mg) strongly disrupted functional connectivity in associative and sensorimotor striatal networks, and this disruption was selectively alleviated in the limbic striatum when co-administered with CBD (10 mg). Oral CBD (600 mg) alone increased connectivity in the associative network but caused minor decreases in limbic and sensorimotor networks. The insula emerged as a key region affected by cannabinoid-induced connectivity changes, with implications for cannabis-related disorders and cannabinoid therapeutics.
Scientific Reports
February 28, 2018
Will Lawn, Jaime E. C. Hallak, J.a.s. Crippa et al.
3 citations
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions. The error has not been fixed in the paper.
Addiction
February 16, 2026
Cassie Bloy, Ananya Sarma, Bethan Marsh et al.
1 citation
People with alcohol use disorder experience changes in consciousness from 0.8 mg/kg intravenous ketamine administration. Ketamine's effects remain broadly consistent across three repeated infusions. Reductions in alcohol consumption linked to ketamine do not appear to be caused by the acute psychoactive effects of the drug.