4.4 Article

Low-dose LSD and the stream of thought: Increased Discontinuity of Mind, Deep Thoughts and abstract flow

Journal

PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 239, Issue 6, Pages 1721-1733

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-021-06006-3

Keywords

LSD; Stream of thought; Resting state cognition; Mind-wandering; Free association; Forward flow; Abstract thinking; Semantic analysis

Funding

  1. Beckley Foundation
  2. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES) [001]

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The study aimed to investigate the effects of LSD on the stream of thought, revealing that LSD impacts chaos, meaning, sensation, and abstract flow, indicating a potential therapeutic window for psycholytic therapy.
Rationale Stream of thought describes the nature of the mind when it is freely roaming, a mental state that is continuous and highly dynamic as in mind-wandering or free association. Classic serotonergic psychedelics are known to profoundly impact perception, cognition and language, yet their influence on the stream of thought remains largely unexplored. Objective To elucidate the effects of LSD on the stream of thought. Methods In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, 24 healthy participants received 50 mu g lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or inactive placebo. Mind-wandering was measured by the Amsterdam Resting State Questionnaire (ARSQ), free association by the Forward Flow Task (FFT) for three seed word types (animals, objects, abstract words). ARSQ and FFT were assessed at +0 h, +2 h, +4 h, +6 h, +8 h and +24 h after drug administration, respectively. Results LSD, compared to placebo, induced different facets of mind-wandering we conceptualized as chaos (Discontinuity of Mind, decreased Sleepiness, Planning, Thoughts under Control, Thoughts about Work and Thoughts about Past), meaning (Deep Thoughts, Not Sharing Thoughts) and sensation (Thoughts about Odours, Thoughts about Sounds). LSD increased the FFT for abstract words reflecting an abstract flow under free association. Overall, chaos was strongest pronounced (+2 h to +6 h), followed by meaning (+2 h to +4 h), sensation (+2 h) and abstract flow (+4 h). Conclusions LSD affects the stream of thought within several levels (active, passive), facets (chaos, meaning, sensation, abstractness) and time points (from +2 h to +6 h). Increased chaos, meaning and abstract flow at +4 h indicate the utility of a late therapeutic window in psycholytic therapy.

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