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Open Science Framework

8 papers in the library · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

Therapeutic potential of psilocybin in the pharmacological treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder: a scoping review protocol.

Open Science Framework July 9, 2026 Raul Edison Luna Lazo, Nicole Milagritos Cardoso Azorza, Jatziri Yanina Vilca Yanac et al.

Psilocybin, a classic psychedelic that acts on serotonin 5-HT2A receptors, is being investigated as a potential treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), a chronic condition marked by intrusive thoughts and repetitive behaviors. Many patients do not respond adequately to first-line treatments like selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and cognitive behavioral therapy. This scoping review, following JBI recommendations and PRISMA-ScR guidelines, will systematically search PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science for preclinical and clinical studies on psilocybin or psilocin for OCD. The review aims to map current evidence, identify knowledge gaps, and guide future research, particularly for treatment-resistant patients.

Efficacy and acceptability of ketamine and esketamine in adults with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder: systematic review and meta-analysis

Open Science Framework January 1, 2026 Annemarie van der Meij, Sotiris Poyiadis, Andrea Cipriani et al.

This preregistration describes an update and extension of a meta-analysis examining ketamine and esketamine for adults with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder. The project is nested within a larger network meta-analysis of next-step strategies for treatment-resistant depression. It restricts interventions to ketamine and esketamine regimens versus placebo, structures outcomes into three time windows (24–72 hours, 1–3 weeks, and 4–12 weeks), and pools results using pairwise random-effects meta-analyses rather than network meta-analysis due to expected lack of direct comparisons between treatment nodes. Short-term outcomes will be extracted from longer-term trials. Subgroup and meta-regression analyses are exploratory.

Investigating the Role of Self-Compassion in MDMA-Assisted Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder

Open Science Framework January 1, 2026 Christina Chwyl, M. Kati Lear, Sunjeev Kamboj et al.

Self-compassion is thought to be important for mental health, especially for people with social anxiety disorder. MDMA-assisted therapy may work by increasing self-compassion. This study will examine whether trait self-compassion rises during treatment and whether self-compassion felt during MDMA dosing sessions leads to lasting changes. It will also test if changes in self-compassion relate to improvements in social anxiety, depression, shame, functioning, and belonging. Five specific aims are outlined to explore these relationships across two dosing sessions.

Assessing the psyhophysiological effects of Happy Tea at a Microdose Together company social event

Open Science Framework November 6, 2025 Michiel van Elk

In a naturalistic field setting, the dose of psilocybin truffles, along with participants' trait absorption and expectations, shaped their subjective experiences and neurophysiological responses. The study aimed to replicate effects previously observed in lab and clinical environments. Higher doses were associated with more intense subjective effects, and individual differences in absorption and expectations moderated these outcomes. The findings suggest that psilocybin's effects can be reproduced outside controlled settings, highlighting the role of psychological factors in modulating the experience.

Understanding Neuroplasticity Induced by Tryptamines (UNITy): Understanding Neuroplasticity Induced by Tryptamines: Rewiring Maladaptive Memories in Hazardous Drinking with Memory Reactivation and Dimethyltryptamine (DMT)

Open Science Framework October 20, 2025 Natalia Fernandez-Vinson, Roger Atkins, Marcus Glennon et al.

This registered clinical study investigates whether N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT), alone or combined with reactivating alcohol-related memories, can produce lasting changes in the brain, cognition, and drinking behavior in people with mild alcohol use disorder who are hazardous drinkers but not seeking treatment. Up to 120 participants will be assigned to one of four groups: alcohol memory retrieval plus DMT, alcohol memory retrieval plus placebo, control memory retrieval plus DMT, or control memory retrieval plus placebo. Drinking levels will be measured over three lab sessions and a nine-month follow-up using timeline follow-back and blood tests.

Recommendations and Consensus Statements on Psilocybin-Assisted Psychotherapy (PAP) for Depression: A Rapid Review and Thematic Analysis

Open Science Framework January 1, 2025 Aimée Freeburn, Alene Sze Jing Yong, Simon Bell

Clinical guidelines and position statements from multiple countries recommend medical psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for adults with depression, but they vary in their specific conditions and safeguards. The review of international documents shows consensus that PAP should be administered in controlled clinical settings with trained therapists, though recommendations differ on patient selection criteria, dosing protocols, and integration procedures. Most guidelines emphasize the need for further research to establish long-term safety and efficacy.

Psychedelic pathways: Exploring reinforcement learning under psychedelic influence

Open Science Framework January 1, 2025 Federico Cavanna, Enzo Tagliazucchi

Psilocybin acutely alters probabilistic reinforcement learning in healthy adults. In a double-blind, randomized, within-subject, placebo-controlled study, behavioral data and event-related potentials from EEG recordings will reveal how the psychedelic modulates neural mechanisms of reward processing and decision-making.

Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy for Trauma-Related Disorders: A Scoping Review of a Depression-Dominated Evidence Base with Implications for Intimate Partner Violence-Related PTSD

Open Science Framework January 1, 2025 Hancock, Mackenzie, Shambhu Prasad Adhikari, Getz, Nicole

Psilocybin-assisted therapy shows emerging promise for treating trauma-related conditions including PTSD, depression, and persistent post-concussion symptoms, with potential relevance for survivors of intimate partner violence who have sustained brain injury. This scoping review mapped research from 2015 to 2025 across multiple databases and grey literature, identifying gaps in the evidence and highlighting the need for future clinical trials specifically targeting IPV survivors. The review did not report quantitative results but provides a framework for designing such trials.