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Christopher W Fields

Anesthesiology Department, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.

3 papers in the library · 29 citations · publishing 2023-2025

Papers

Psychedelic Therapist Sexual Misconduct and Other Adverse Experiences Among a Sample of Naturalistic Psychedelic Users.

Psychedelic medicine (New Rochelle, N.Y.) March 1, 2025 Daniel J Kruger, Jacob S Aday, Christopher W Fields et al. 19 citations

In an anonymous online survey of 1,221 people who reported past psychedelic use, most described adverse experiences: 74.3% felt frightened, 58.6% sadness, 54.3% body shaking or trembling, and 51.6% loneliness. About half reported some other adverse experience, and one in ten had adverse physical reactions. One-third knew someone arrested for possession or use of psychedelics; 8% reported that they or someone they know was the victim of inappropriate sexual contact by a psychedelic sitter, guide, or practitioner; and one-quarter knew someone who experienced a severe adverse event other than inappropriate sexual contact or arrest. The findings indicate that despite beneficial effects, psychedelic experiences can be challenging, distressing, or harmful, highlighting the need to prevent, identify, manage, and treat adverse events.

An Assessment of Psychedelic Knowledge Among People Using Psychedelics Naturalistically.

Journal of psychoactive drugs January 1, 2023 Daniel J Kruger, Nicolas G Glynos, Christopher W Fields et al. 10 citations

People who use psychedelics and have higher education, lower age, greater frequency of use, male gender, White/Caucasian identity, higher income, and experience with more types of psychedelics tend to know more about legal status, active compounds, and therapeutic efficacy. A survey of 1,435 participants recruited at a psychedelic advocacy event and online showed overall high knowledge, but gaps remain, highlighting the need for targeted education and harm reduction outreach, especially in under-represented communities.

The impact of the serotonergic psychedelic DOI on active vision in freely moving mice.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology October 15, 2025 Rolf J Skyberg, Christopher W Fields, Dylan M Martins et al. preprint

Psychedelics like DOI alter visual perception by increasing how often mice actively sample their visual environment during free movement, yet they reduce the neural responses in the primary visual cortex that these behaviors generate. The effects vary widely across individual neurons and depend on the type of visual input, with stronger suppression of responses to unpredictable stimuli than to predictable ones. This dissociation suggests that predictability of visual events influences how psychedelics disrupt sensory processing, offering insights into the neural basis of altered perceptual states.