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  3. P300-mediated modulations in self–other processing under psychedelic psilocybin are related to connectedness and changed meaning: a window into the self–other overlap
 

P300-mediated modulations in self–other processing under psychedelic psilocybin are related to connectedness and changed meaning: a window into the self–other overlap

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/145708
Date of Publication
December 2020
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Zentrum für Translati...

Contributor
Smigielski, Lukasz
Kometer, M
Scheidegger, M
Stress, C
Preller, KH
König, Thomasorcid-logo
Zentrum für Translationale Forschung der Universitätsklinik für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie
Vollenweider, FX
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

Series
Human brain mapping
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1065-9471
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1002/hbm.25174
PubMed ID
32820851
Description
The concept of self and self-referential processing has a growing explanatory value in psychiatry and neuroscience, referring to the cognitive organization and perceptual differentiation of self-stimuli in health and disease. Conditions in which selfhood loses its natural coherence offer a unique opportunity for elucidating the mechanisms underlying self-disturbances. We assessed the psychoactive effects of psilocybin (230 μg/kg p.o.), a preferential 5-HT1A/2A agonist known to induce shifts in self-perception. Our placebo-controlled, double-blind, within-subject crossover experiment (n = 17) implemented a verbal self-monitoring task involving vocalizations and participant identification of real-time auditory source- (self/other) and pitch-modulating feedback. Subjective experience and task performance were analyzed, with time-point-by-time-point assumption-free multivariate randomization statistics applied to the spatiotemporal dynamics of event-related potentials. Psilocybin-modulated self-experience, interacted with source to affect task accuracy, and altered the late phase of self-stimuli encoding by abolishing the distinctiveness of self- and other-related electric field configurations during the P300 timeframe. This last effect was driven by current source density changes within the supragenual anterior cingulate and right insular cortex. The extent of the P300 effect was associated with the intensity of psilocybin-induced feelings of unity and changed meaning of percepts. Modulations of late encoding and their underlying neural generators in self-referential processing networks via 5-HT signaling may be key for understanding self-disorders. This mechanism may reflect a neural instantiation of altered self-other and relational meaning processing in a stimulus-locked time domain. The study elucidates the neuropharmacological foundation of subjectivity, with implications for therapy, underscoring the concept of connectedness.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/36736
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P3_and_psilocybin.pdfAdobe PDF3.39 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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