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January 2026

Mystical experience

What January 2026's 7 new studies found, synthesized from the papers below. All Mystical experience research →

The synthesis

Synthesized from 7 studies in the library · AI-generated, grounded in the abstracts below

Found by searching the library for Mystical experience, mystical-type experience, ego dissolution, unitive experience, peak experience, then ranked by relevance.

Research in January 2026 found that mystical experiences are strongly influenced by psychological context (set) and spirituality, with psilocybin-assisted therapy studies showing significant associations between spirituality, intentions, and mystical experience intensity. A real-world case series on ketamine combined with psychotherapy found that ego dissolution (a mystical-type experience) correlated with symptom improvement in treatment-resistant depression. However, evidence is limited by small sample sizes, open-label designs, and the theoretical nature of some studies.

Confidence in the evidence

Low-Moderate
  • Only one small open-label trial (n=20) directly examined mystical experiences in psilocybin-assisted therapy, showing strong correlations but lacking a control group.
  • A real-world case series (n=12) on ketamine and psychotherapy found correlations between ego dissolution and outcomes, but the sample is very small and uncontrolled.
  • One cross-sectional study (n=55 completers) explored mystical experiences and yoga-based traits, but had high dropout and no causal inference.
  • Several studies were theoretical or qualitative, providing conceptual frameworks rather than empirical evidence.
  • The studies consistently point to the importance of set, setting, and spirituality, but the evidence base is too small and heterogeneous to draw firm conclusions.
How we rate confidence

Confidence reflects the strength of the underlying evidence, not whether the result is favorable. It weighs the number and size of studies, their design (randomized trials count for more than observational or single-case work), how consistently they point the same way, and their risk of bias.

Tiers run from Insufficient to High. High is rare in this field: small, early, or open-label studies land lower even when their direction is encouraging.

Evidence by study

Direction is each study's finding relative to your question: Supports, Opposes, No effect, Mixed, or Unclear.

Numinous-like symptoms (including mystical features) were found in 6% of epilepsy patients and 8.7% of tumor patients, with identified ecstatic seizures, out-of-body experiences, and sensed presence.

observational cohort Sample size: 106

Psychological context (set) was more strongly associated with self-transcendent and mystical experiences than the specific substance used, supporting a 'mindset-over-molecule' pattern.

observational

Mystical experience intensity was significantly associated with spirituality (rs=0.76), spiritual intentions (rs=0.71), positive mindset (rs=0.52), and positive perceptions of setting (rs=0.46) in psilocybin-assisted therapy.

open-label trial Sample size: 20

The article uses Walter Benjamin's concept of 'aura' to discuss tensions between authenticity and standardization when psychedelic mystical experiences are medicalized.

theoretical

Ego dissolution during ketamine session 3 correlated with symptom improvement and psychological insight; 67% response and 58% remission rates were observed, with 50% maintaining remission at 1-year follow-up.

case series Sample size: 12

The article proposes that mystical experiences and insight are both 'realization experiences' that can be modeled using behavioral entropy and graph theory.

theoretical

The study examined relationships between mystical experiences and yoga-based personality traits (Kleshas, Gunas, yogic modes of consciousness) in those who had mystical experiences on psychedelics or otherwise.

cross-sectional Sample size: 55

Points of agreement

  • Mystical experiences are strongly influenced by psychological context (set) and spirituality.
  • Mystical-type experiences (including ego dissolution) may correlate with therapeutic outcomes in psychedelic and ketamine treatments.
  • The importance of set and setting is consistently emphasized across empirical and theoretical studies.

Conflicts

  • No direct conflicts were identified among the studies; however, the evidence base is too small and heterogeneous to assess consistency across different substances and populations.

Gaps

  • Durability of mystical experience effects beyond short-term follow-up is not well studied.
  • Blinding and placebo controls are lacking in most studies.
  • Sample sizes are very small (n=12 to n=55 completers), limiting generalizability.
  • Diverse populations (epilepsy, AUD, TRD, recreational users) make cross-study comparisons difficult.
  • The role of dose, specific substances, and long-term safety remains understudied.
Browse these studies in the library