Psilocybin acts by altering the activity and connectivity across
DMN-associated brain regions: (a) psilocybin increases and
diversifies functional connectivity (=positively correlated
neural activity) patterns throughout the brain. Nodes represent
neuronal clusters, shades of grey delineate communities obtained
by modularity, node size proportionate to degree of
connectedness and edges are direct links between functionally
connected areas. Figure was adapted with permission from Petri et
al. (2014). (b) According to the ‘REBUS and the
anarchic brain’ theory Carhart-Harris and Friston
(2019), the top–down inhibitory control by which
the PFC and PCC maintain prior beliefs (top) is decreased by
psychedelics, enabling incoming inputs from HC, amygdala and
sensory cortices to have a larger effect on the subsequent
activation patterns (bottom). Thus, under normal circumstances,
memory-, emotion- and sensation-related inputs have a more
limited impact on the contents of consciousness. In contrast,
psychedelics enhance bottom-up information flow by decreasing
top–down inhibition, which leads to enriched experience,
potentially enabling the emergence of novel insights with
therapeutic benefits.
PFC: prefrontal cortex; PCC: posterior cingulate cortex; HC:
hippocampus; A: amygdala; V1/2: primary and secondary visual
areas.
Created with BioRender.com.