Psilocybin-Research.comSearchable psilocybin and psilocin bibliometrics.
Published

Psilocybin impairs high-level but not low-level motion perception.

The hallucinogenic serotonin(1A&2A) agonist psilocybin is known for its ability to induce illusions of motion in otherwise stationary objects or textured surfaces. This study investigated the effect of psilocybin on local and global motion processing in nine human volunteers. Using a forced choice direction of motion discrimination task we show that psilocybin selectively impairs coherence sensitivity for random dot patterns, likely mediated by high-level global motion detectors, but not contrast sensitivity for drifting gratings, believed to be mediated by low-level detectors. These results are in line with those observed within schizophrenic populations and are discussed in respect to the proposition that psilocybin may provide a model to investigate clinical psychosis and the pharmacological underpinnings of visual perception in normal populations.

Open source BibTeX RIS

Bibliographic context

Journal
Unknown
Date
2004-07-31
Source
Europe PMC
DOI
10.1097/00001756-200408260-00023
PubMed
15305143

Citation graph

0 referenced DOIs found in stored source metadata. 0 indexed papers cite this DOI.

Open citation network

Related papers

No close related records were found yet.