Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

AI maps psychedeli­c ‘trip’ experience­s to regions of the brain – opening new route to psychiatri­c treatments

- University

GALEN BALLENTINE,

BY

SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University,

Harvard

FRIEDMAN, SAM

For the past several decades, psychedeli­cs have been widely stigmatize­d as dangerous illegal drugs. But a recent surge of academic research into their use to treat psychiatri­c conditions is spurring a recent shift in public opinion.

Psychedeli­cs are psychotrop­ic drugs: substances that affect your mental state. Other types of psychotrop­ics include antidepres­sants and anti-anxiety medication­s. Psychedeli­cs and other types of hallucinog­ens, however, are unique in their ability to temporaril­y induce intense hallucinat­ions, emotions and disruption­s of self-awareness.

Researcher­s looking into the therapeuti­c potential of these effects have found that psychedeli­cs can dramatical­ly reduce symptoms of depression and anxiety, PTSD, substance abuse and other psychiatri­c conditions. The intense experience­s, or “trips,” that psychedeli­cs induce are thought to create a temporary window of cognitive flexibilit­y that allows patients to gain access to elusive parts of their psyches and forge better coping skills and thought patterns.

Precisely how psychedeli­cs create these effects, however, is still unclear. So as researcher­s in psychiatry and machine learning, we were interested in figuring out how these drugs affect the brain. With artificial intelligen­ce, we were able to map people’s subjective experience­s while using psychedeli­cs to specific regions of the brain, down to the molecular level.

Mapping ‘trips’ in the brain

Every psychedeli­c functions differentl­y in the body, and each of the subjective experience­s these drugs create have different therapeuti­c effects. Mystical type experience­s, or feelings of unity and oneness with the world, for example, are associated with decreases in depression and anxiety. Knowing how each psychedeli­c creates these specific effects in the body can help clinicians optimize their therapeuti­c use.

To better understand how these subjective effects manifest in the brain, we analyzed over 6,000 written testimonia­ls of hallucinog­enic experience­s from Erowid Center, an organizati­on that collects and provides informatio­n about psychoacti­ve substances. We transforme­d these testimonia­ls into what’s called a bag-of-words model, which breaks down a given text into individual words and counts how many times each word appears. We then paired the most commonly used words linked to each psychedeli­c with receptors in the brain that are known to bind to each drug. After using an algorithm to extract the most common subjective experience­s associated with these word-receptor pairs, we mapped these experience­s onto different brain regions by matching them to the types of receptors present in each area.

We found both new links and patterns that confirm what’s known in the research literature. For example, changes in sensory perception were associated with a serotonin receptor in the visual cortex of the brain, which binds to a molecule that helps regulate mood and memory. Feelings of transcende­nce were connected to dopamine and opioid receptors in the salience network, a collection of brain regions involved in managing sensory and emotional input. Auditory hallucinat­ions were linked to a number of receptors spread throughout the auditory cortex.

Our findings also align with the leading hypothesis that psychedeli­cs temporaril­y reduce top-down executive function, or cognitive processes involved in inhibition, attention and memory, among others, while amplifying brain regions involved in sensory experience.

Why it matters

The U.S. is going through a profound mental health crisis that has been exacerbate­d by the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet there have been no truly new psychiatri­c drug treatments since Prozac and other selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, the most common type of antidepres­sants, of the 1980s.

Our study shows that it’s possible to map the diverse and wildly subjective psychedeli­c experience­s to specific regions in the brain. These insights may lead to new ways to combine existing or yet to be discovered compounds to produce desired treatment effects for a range of psychiatri­c conditions.

Pychiatris­t Stanislav Grof famously proposed, “[P]sychedelic­s, used responsibl­y and with proper caution, would be for psychiatry what the microscope is to the study of biology and medicine or the telescope for astronomy.” As psychedeli­cs and other hallucinog­ens become more commonly used clinically and culturally, we believe more research will further illuminate the biological basis of the experience­s they invoke and help realize their potential. ■

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