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Kim Wolff

King's College London

2 papers in the library · 186 citations · publishing 2014-2025

Papers

The Effects of Acutely Administered 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine on Spontaneous Brain Function in Healthy Volunteers Measured with Arterial Spin Labeling and Blood Oxygen Level–Dependent Resting State Functional Connectivity

Biological Psychiatry January 10, 2014 Robin Carhart‐Harris, Kevin Murphy, Robert Leech et al. 182 citations

The medial temporal lobes (MTLs) are specifically involved in how MDMA works in the brain, though more research is needed to understand how the drug's characteristic subjective effects emerge from its modulation of spontaneous brain activity.

The impact of childhood trauma and cannabis use on paranoia: a structural equation model approach.

Psychological medicine August 8, 2025 Giulia Trotta, Edoardo Spinazzola, Hannah Degen et al. 4 citations

Childhood trauma, especially emotional and physical abuse, is strongly linked to paranoia, and cannabis use amplifies that effect. In a survey of 4,736 adults, those who experienced childhood trauma reported higher paranoia, and weekly cannabis use—measured in standard THC units—also predicted greater paranoia. Cannabis use partially mediated the link between trauma and paranoia, though trauma itself had a much larger direct effect. The findings suggest that assessing both trauma history and cannabis exposure in standard THC units could improve risk detection and guide interventions for people with childhood trauma.