4.7 Article

LSD alters dynamic integration and segregation in the human brain

期刊

NEUROIMAGE
卷 227, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117653

关键词

LSD; Integration-segregation; FMRI dynamics; Complexity; Structure-function; Small-world network

资金

  1. Gates Cambridge Trust Scholarship
  2. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR)
  3. Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre
  4. NIHR Senior Investigator Awards
  5. Stephen Erskine Fellowship at Queens' College, Cambridge
  6. British Oxygen Professorship of the Royal College of Anaesthetists
  7. Imperial College President's Scholarship
  8. Oon Khye Beng Ch'Hia Tsio Studentship for Research in Preventive Medicine
  9. Alex Mosley Charitable Trust
  10. Crowd Funding Campaign
  11. Beckley Foundation
  12. MRC research infrastructure award [MR/M009041/1]
  13. McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience at Washington University
  14. [1U54MH091657]
  15. MRC [MR/M009041/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Investigating the effects of LSD on brain function and subjective experience reveals that LSD increases the complexity of dynamic functional connectivity and weakens the relationship between functional and anatomical connectivity. Time-specific effects are correlated with different aspects of subjective experiences, providing a more nuanced and temporally-specific understanding of altered brain connectivity and complexity under psychedelics.
Investigating changes in brain function induced by mind-altering substances such as LSD is a powerful method for interrogating and understanding how mind interfaces with brain, by connecting novel psychological phenomena with their neurobiological correlates. LSD is known to increase measures of brain complexity, potentially reflecting a neurobiological correlate of the especially rich phenomenological content of psychedelic-induced experiences. Yet although the subjective stream of consciousness is a constant ebb and flow, no studies to date have investigated how LSD influences the dynamics of functional connectivity in the human brain. Focusing on the two fundamental network properties of integration and segregation, here we combined graph theory and dynamic functional connectivity from resting-state functional MRI to examine time-resolved effects of LSD on brain networks properties and subjective experiences. Our main finding is that the effects of LSD on brain function and subjective experience are non-uniform in time: LSD makes globally segregated sub-states of dynamic functional connectivity more complex, and weakens the relationship between functional and anatomical connectivity. On a regional level, LSD reduces functional connectivity of the anterior medial prefrontal cortex, specifically during states of high segregation. Time-specific effects were correlated with different aspects of subjective experiences; in particular, ego dissolution was predicted by increased small-world organisation during a state of high global integration. These results reveal a more nuanced, temporally-specific picture of altered brain connectivity and complexity under psychedelics than has previously been reported.

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