Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
July 6, 2009
1,023 citations
A core brain network called the default mode network (DMN) supports three distinct self-referential processes: remembering the past, imagining the future, and understanding others' minds. Functional MRI scans revealed a common pattern of neural activation across all three processes within the DMN. Autobiographical remembering and prospection more strongly engaged midline DMN structures, while theory-of-mind reasoning more strongly engaged lateral DMN areas. Activity in a key DMN node, the medial prefrontal cortex, correlated with activity in other DMN regions during all three tasks. The findings suggest the DMN provides a shared neural foundation for simulating internal experiences.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
October 1, 2005
Olivia Carter, David C. Burr, John D. Pettigrew et al.
236 citations
A hallucinogenic drug that activates serotonin receptors, psilocybin, impaired healthy volunteers' ability to track moving objects but did not affect their spatial working memory. Blocking the 5-HT2A receptor with ketanserin before psilocybin did not prevent this attentional deficit, pointing to the 5-HT1A receptor as the likely cause. The authors suggest the impairment may stem from a reduced ability to filter out distractions rather than a loss of attentional capacity. Eight participants completed both tasks under placebo, psilocybin, ketanserin, and the combination.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
January 1, 2023
Johannes G Ramaekers, Pablo Mallaroni, Lilian Kloft et al.
15 citations
In members of the Santo Daime church who regularly consume ayahuasca in a ritual setting, the brew's main psychoactive compound DMT drives feelings of oceanic boundlessness, visual restructuring, and ego dissolution, with these effects correlating with peak DMT concentration in the blood. However, measures of mental imagery—including visual perspective shifting, vividness of imagery, and associative thinking—did not noticeably differ between sober and ayahuasca conditions, though subjective cognitive flexibility was lower under ayahuasca. Two mental imagery measures (perspective shifts and cognitive flexibility) correlated with peak DMT levels. Long-term ayahuasca use may produce compensatory or neuroadaptive effects that dampen the acute impact on mental imagery.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
January 1, 2023
Fabienne Picard
11 citations
Ecstatic epilepsy is a rare form of focal epilepsy where seizures begin with ecstatic or mystical experiences, including feelings of enhanced self-awareness, mental clarity, unity with everything, bliss, and physical well-being. This perspective article describes the phenomenology and historical context of these seizures, identifying the anterior insula as the primary brain structure involved. The authors propose that temporary disruptions to anterior insula activity may interrupt interoceptive prediction errors, leading to an absence of uncertainty and a sense of bliss, as perfect prediction of the body's physiological state is mimicked. An alternative hypothesis suggests the anterior insula processes surprise, and epileptic discharge may interrupt unexpected events, producing a sense of complete control and oneness with the environment.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
December 30, 2025
Evan Lewis-Healey, Carla Pallavicini, Federico Cavanna et al.
4 citations
The psychedelic drug DMT rapidly reorganizes conscious experience and brain activity, but the link between brain dynamics and subjective effects remains unclear. In a blinded, dose-dependent study, 19 participants received 20 mg or 40 mg of DMT. The higher dose produced more intense visual hallucinations and emotional experiences. Electroencephalography data showed that alpha power and permutation entropy best tracked moment-to-moment changes in subjective experience, while Lempel-Ziv complexity—previously thought to be a strong correlate—showed the weakest association. The findings indicate that the relationship between neural complexity and psychedelic phenomenology is less straightforward than hypothesized.