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Study explores relationship between psychedelics and consciousness

Data has shown a single psychedelic experience caused increases in the attribution of consciousness to animate and inanimate things.

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Ketamine as effective as ECT for major depression

A new study has shown that higher ratings of mystical-type experiences induced by psychedelics were associated with greater increases in the attribution of consciousness.

Belief changing experiences from classic psychedelics such as psilocybin, LSD or ayahuasca, could be “long-lasting”, say researchers at Johns Hopkins University. 

Current research into psychedelics is largely focused on the benefits they could provide for the treatment of mental ill-health. However,  many believe psychedelics can provide insights into the nature of consciousness.

The research team set out to address the question of whether psychedelics might change the attribution of consciousness, publishing their findings in Frontiers in Psychology.

See also  The harms of psychedelics: separating anecdotes and misinformation

Analysing data on 1,606 people who had a belief-changing psychedelic experience, the researchers discovered that among people who have had just one of these experiences, there were large increases in attribution of consciousness to animate and inanimate things.

Study researcher, Sandeep Nayak, MD, postdoctoral research fellow at the Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, commented: “This study demonstrates that when beliefs change following a psychedelic experience, attributions of consciousness to various entities tend to increase.

“It’s not clear why, whether that might be an innate drug effect, cultural factors or whether psychedelics might somehow expose innate cognitive biases that attribute features of the mind to the world.”

The results from surveys demonstrated that, following a belief-changing psychedelic experience,

attribution of consciousness to insects grew from 33 per cent to 57 per cent, to fungi from 21 per cent to 56 per cent, to plants from 26 per cent to 61 per cent, to inanimate natural objects from 8 per cent to 26 per cent and to inanimate manmade objects from 3 per cent to 15 per cent.

“The results suggesting that a single psychedelic experience can produce a broad increase in attribution of consciousness to other things, raises intriguing questions about possible innate or experiential mechanisms underlying such belief changes,” said Roland Griffiths, PhD, professor in the Neuropsychopharmacology of Consciousness at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and founding director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research. 

“The topic of consciousness is a notoriously difficult scientific problem that has led many to conclude it is not solvable.”

See also  Psychedelics study maps changes of conscious awareness 

Nayak added: “On average, participants indicated the belief-changing experience in question occurred eight years prior to taking the survey, so these belief changes may be long-lasting.”

Belief-changing, or “mystical” type experience have been suggested to positively benefit well being and mental health.

Griffith, in his 2018 study with Frederick Barrett ‘Classic Hallucinogens and Mystical Experiences: Phenomenology and Neural Correlates’, highlights that “enduring personal meaning in healthy volunteers and therapeutic outcomes in patients, including reduction and cessation of substance abuse behaviours and reduction of anxiety and depression in patients with a life-threatening cancer diagnosis, are related to the occurrence of mystical experiences during drug sessions.”

In another study, Griffith et all comment: “Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type experiences with participant-attributed increases in well being.”

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Evegreen

2025 in Psychedelics: Big Pharma Entry, Patient Access in Germany, Czech and Australia, Governments Expand Conversation With Stakeholders

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In 2025, the psychedelic medicine sector reached a more defined phase of maturity, as Big Pharma entry, late-stage clinical readouts, and incremental regulatory shifts began to reshape investor expectations, policy debates, and the direction of research across business, government, and academia.

Business and Investment

Big Pharma joins the sector as key companies push research goals forward 

2025 saw pivotal corporate developments across the major psychedelic medicine companies, uplifting investor expectations and clarifying some regulatory pathways. A slow but steady loosening of regulatory hurdles and positive clinical results have breathed new life into the sector, with some analysts reporting refreshed investor interest and a possible end to the capital drought that has slashed the space in recent years.

Big Pharma giant AbbVie, known for blockbuster drugs in immunology and oncology, agreed to acquire Gilgamesh Pharmaceuticals’ lead experimental therapy, bretisilocin, in a deal reportedly worth $1.2 billion. Bretisilocin is a novel psychedelic targeting major depressive disorder. The event is a signal of Big Pharma entering the space and prioritising shorter-acting serotonin-2A modulators for depression.

Compass Pathways reached a major clinical inflection point, reporting positive results in its first Phase 3 COMP360 trial and accelerating commercial launch planning. CEO Kabir Nath recently told Psychedelic Health that positive talks with the FDA indicate that the company “could potentially be looking at a launch in early 2027” for its flagship program with synthetic psilocybin.

Beckley Psytech, which is supported by Atai Life Sciences secured a Breakthrough Therapy designation by the FDA for BPL-003, a novel intranasal formulation of 5-MeO-DMT, reinforcing regulatory momentum the compound known as “toad venom.” The FDA’s decision follows promising results from a Phase 2b clinical trial, which demonstrated that a single dose of the compound led to rapid and sustained reductions in depressive symptoms within 24 hours, with effects lasting up to eight weeks.

Cybin advanced multiple clinical programs, completing enrollment milestones for CYB004, a version of DMT targeting generalised anxiety disorder and maintaining progress on CYB003, a 5-HT2A receptor agonist similar to psilocybin for major depressive disorder. The company secured financing to extend runway and protect intellectual property across its portfolio.

MindMed reported faster than expected enrollment in its Phase 3 MM120 program, an analog of LSD targeting generalised anxiety disorder, updating timelines for topline readouts and emphasising oral LSD analogs as a differentiated regulatory route. 

Policy and Regulation

Major global players reschedule psychedelics for medical use

2025 marked a year of uneven but consequential movement in psychedelic policy and regulation, with a small number of jurisdictions taking concrete steps toward medical access while others remained in exploratory or preparatory phases.

The UK’s regulatory landscape for psychedelic medicine continued to evolve through policy dialogue and research initiatives, although no formal legalisation or medical scheduling changes occurred. The Royal College of Psychiatrists published a position statement reviewing evidence on psilocybin, MDMA, LSD, and ketamine, concluding that current data are promising but insufficient to recommend routine clinical use outside licensed settings, emphasising the need for more robust trials and caution against premature adoption.

This year, the UK government agreed in principle with key Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) recommendations to ease barriers to Schedule 1 psychedelic research. Part of the recommendations included allowing universities and hospitals to conduct research without a Home Office domestic licence, and ethically approved clinical trials to be exempt from additional licensing. Though these changes are not in effect yet, they could be enacted after a pilot program takes place.

Australia continued to stand out as a global pioneer in medical access. Since 1 July 2023, MDMA and psilocybin have been rescheduled from strictly prohibited status to controlled medicines, meaning authorised psychiatrists can legally prescribe them for treatment-resistant depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. From 6 January 2025, new quality standards for MDMA and psilocybin products came into force, requiring compliance for all supplied APIs and finished products. The Department of Veterans’ Affairs approved funding for psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy for eligible veterans, marking a first step toward public payer support.

In Europe, Germany became the first EU country to establish a formal compassionate use access programme for psilocybin, enabling adults with treatment-resistant depression to receive psilocybin therapy at specialised centres under a regulated framework prior to full regulatory approval. This initiative, supported by the German Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices and implemented at facilities in Mannheim and Berlin, marks a landmark step in European psychedelic policy.

The Czech Republic is set to become one of the first European countries to legalise medical use of psilocybin from January 1, 2026. The outgoing government approved legislation late in 2025 allowing psychiatrists and psychotherapists to administer psilocybin for conditions such as cancer-related depression and serious clinical depression when other registered treatments have failed or are not tolerated. Psilocybin therapy will be introduced under controlled clinical conditions at qualified facilities.

In the United States, action remained at the state-level. Oregon and Colorado, having already legalised regulated access to natural psychedelics including psilocybin and launched supervised service programs, continued to refine implementation and data collection frameworks in 2025. Meanwhile, numerous state legislatures introduced bills to advance psychedelic therapy access, and Massachusetts held legislative hearings on psychedelic therapy programmes, reflecting growing political engagement despite the absence of federal reclassification.

Science and Research

New data from real-world applications and feedback from regulatory agencies inform research 

In the academic side of the equation, 2025 consolidated a transition from exploratory efficacy signals to confirmatory, regulation-relevant evidence, while underscoring persistent limitations: small sample biases, variable control conditions, and unresolved questions about long-term safety and scalability.

One of the most significant published findings came from a phase 2 trial in cancer patients, where a single dose of psilocybin combined with therapy produced sustained reductions in depression and anxiety, with many participants maintaining benefits up to two years later. 

Alongside observational outcomes, mid-stage clinical studies have found LSD may ease anxiety symptoms for up to three months in people with moderate-to-severe generalised anxiety disorder, with a significant proportion of participants still in remission at 12 weeks.

For the first time, data from real-world application of psilocybin treatment under a regulated program was published by one of the Oregon clinics providing treatment, sharing insights into how the legal, real-world version of the treatment works, who can access it, and whether the benefits observed in trials translate to broader populations.

Longitudinal data strengthened claims of sustained benefit in selected cohorts. Multiple follow-up reports published in 2025 described durable antidepressant effects at extended intervals after single or limited psilocybin administrations, although most samples remained small and non-randomised. These findings have prompted calls for larger, controlled long-term studies. 

The FDA’s public release of the complete response letter on Lykos Therapeutics’ trials on MDMA therapy highlighted durability and safety questions, prompting re-examination of trial design and participant selection in MDMA and related programmes.

Cambridge Psychedelic Research Group formally launched in 2025, creating a new hub for clinical trials and interdisciplinary research in the UK, including pathways for patient recruitment and academic-industry collaboration.

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Evegreen

Can Ego Death Be Measured? New Study Finds Link in Brain Activity After One DMT Dose

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A new study in The Journal of Neuroscience has shed light on how the psychedelic N,N-Dimethyltryptamine, or DMT, changes brain activity during its most intense psychological effects.

The research focuses on a key experience reported by many users of the drug, the temporary disappearance of the sense of self, often called ego-dissolution.

DMT is known for producing rapid, vivid and immersive psychedelic states that unfold within minutes. The study, led by Mona Irrmischer and colleagues, set out to identify what happens in the brain during this altered state, and how those changes relate to subjective feelings of becoming “less of a person,” or losing individual identity.

Dr Christopher Timmermann, one of the study’s co-authors, will be a panelist at the upcoming PSYCH Symposium: London 2025, on December 4 at London’s Conway Hall, where key figures in the psychedelics space will meet to discuss the future of policy, research and patient roll out.

To investigate this, the researchers used electroencephalography, EEG, which records electrical activity from the scalp. Twenty-seven healthy volunteers took part in two separate clinical sessions. In one, they were injected with DMT. In the other, they received a placebo saline injection. Neither participants nor experimenters were told which session was which at the time. EEG was recorded before and after injection, and participants later rated their subjective experience, including whether they felt the boundaries of their self dissolve.

The team measured what they call “criticality,” a property of brain activity that reflects the balance between order and randomness. A near-critical brain is thought to be versatile, able to shift fluidly between different states. It maintains patterns across long periods of time, which helps organize thought, perception and the experience of continuous identity. When the brain moves away from this balance, signals may become either too rigid or too chaotic.

To quantify this, the researchers used two tools. One, detrended fluctuation analysis, or DFA, measures how consistent brain rhythms remain over longer timescales. Higher values indicate more structured, temporally coherent activity. Lower values show more noise and unpredictability. The other measure, the functional excitatory-inhibitory ratio, distinguishes whether changes push the brain toward suppressed subcritical states or toward unstable supercritical activity.

Under DMT, DFA values dropped significantly across several frequency bands, especially alpha rhythms. This means brain signals became less temporally organized and more entropic. The effect was widespread, not limited to a small region, indicating a broad shift in how neural networks behave over time.

The excitatory-inhibitory analysis provided further clarity. Rather than showing runaway excitation, the changes suggested that DMT pushed brain dynamics toward subcritical states, especially in parietal and occipital regions. These parts of the brain help integrate sensory information and support internal models that anchor a person’s sense of being a continuous self. Under DMT, their activity became less structured and less stable.

Critically, these neural shifts were directly tied to how people felt. Participants who reported stronger ego-dissolution also showed the biggest reductions in criticality, particularly in theta and alpha bands. This correlation suggests that the breakdown of long-range, temporally organized brain activity is closely linked to the subjective loss of self.

The authors emphasize that these effects do not resemble unconsciousness. Instead, they reflect a brain that cannot maintain its usual long-term patterns of self-representation. Without the steady temporal scaffolding that normally supports identity, experience becomes immediate, immersive and unanchored.

The study challenges a simple picture of psychedelics as increasing brain flexibility by moving closer to a balanced critical state. Under DMT, entropy does increase, but the rhythms most involved in self-processing move away from balanced dynamics. The result is not random chaos but a specific weakening of the neural patterns that hold the self together.

By showing how a psychedelic alters the brain in real time, the research provides a clearer biological explanation for one of the most mysterious psychedelic effects. It points to ego-dissolution not as a vague spiritual idea, but as a measurable change in how the brain organizes its activity over time.

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Evegreen

Psilocybin Shows Promise in Treating Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders: Is the Industry Getting Involved?

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A newly published systematic review titled on psilocybin’s effects on obsessive‑compulsive behaviours provides an up-to-date synthesis of research into the compound’s potential for treating OCD and related disorders. 

The study integrates findings from both animal models and early human trials, drawing attention to a consistent signal: reductions in obsessive or compulsive behaviours following psilocybin administration.

The review shows that in preclinical models (for example mice with altered grooming behaviours) psilocybin (or its active metabolite) produced marked reductions in compulsive-like behaviours, sometimes lasting beyond the immediate administration period. 

Clinically, although data remain limited, participants in early trials or case reports experienced rapid reductions in symptom severity (for example within hours or days) after single doses. The authors emphasise that while the mood-disorder applications of psilocybin are more advanced, this compulsive-behaviour indication is an important frontier.

In humans, single doses of psilocybin led to rapid symptom reductions. For example, in an open‑label study of nine treatment‑resistant OCD patients, reductions of 23 % to 100 % on the Y‑BOCS scale were recorded between 4 and 24 hours after dosing. A pilot trial in body dysmorphic disorder (a related OCRD) using a 25 mg psilocybin dose reported sustained improvements over 12 weeks in 58.3 % of participants. 

Mechanistically, the review highlights that psilocybin’s effects on compulsivity may not map exactly onto its classic psychedelic mechanism (5-HT₂A receptor activation). Some animal data suggest alternate or additional pathways (for instance 5-HT₇ receptor involvement, synaptic protein modulation) may underpin the anti-compulsive outcomes. The authors call for more robust, placebo-controlled human trials, ideally with neuroimaging and circuit-level biomarkers, to validate these early signals and clarify therapeutic protocols. 

The authors of the review emphasise that while the findings are promising, the evidence remains early stage. Key limitations include small clinical sample sizes, lack of placebo‑controls, short follow‑up intervals and heterogeneity in doses and models. They call for larger, double‑blind, placebo‑controlled trials incorporating neuroimaging of fronto‑striatal circuits, to more precisely map psilocybin’s effect in OCRDs. 

The authors propose that psilocybin may one day serve as a treatment for disorders characterised by repetitive, intrusive behaviours, not just mood disorders.

Are companies developing psilocybin-based treatments for OCD?

Several biotechnology companies are advancing psilocybin-based therapies for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), signalling growing clinical interest in this area. 

Ceruvia Lifesciences has received U.S. FDA approval for an Investigational New Drug application to begin a Phase 2 trial using its synthetic psilocybin compound, SYNP-101, for OCD. The multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study will administer a single oral dose and monitor participants for 12 weeks to assess symptom reduction, making it one of the most advanced OCD-focused psilocybin programmes.

Filament Health is developing PEX010, a botanical psilocybin drug exported to Israel for a trial investigating treatment-resistant OCD and PTSD.

MycoMedica Life Sciences lists OCD among its target indications, though its programmes remain early stage, while Compass Pathways is exploring broader psychiatric uses for COMP360, including potential applications in OCD.

Photo by Mélissa Jeanty on Unsplash.

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Psychedelic Health is a journalist-led news site. Any views expressed by interviewees or commentators do not reflect our own. We do not provide medical advice or promote the personal use of psychedelic compounds. Please seek professional medical advice if you are concerned about any of the issues raised.

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