The effect of psychedelics on associative learning: a systematic review
bioRxiv July 22, 2025 Alice Caulfield, Lorraine Li, Famia Askari et al. preprint
Psychedelics show potential for enhancing associative learning in animals, according to a systematic review of 31 studies (29 animal, 2 human). The review found that psychedelic administration improved learning across classical and operant conditioning paradigms, including fear extinction and reversal learning, though effects varied by dose, timing, training intensity, and sex. Possible mechanisms include increased prediction error sensitivity, serotonin receptor agonism, and structural plasticity. Learning enhancements may persist into the post-acute phase and depend on active environmental engagement. These findings have not yet been confirmed in humans, but suggest a window of enhanced learning that could inform psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy.