Psychedelics relax predictive processing in the post-acute period by remodeling cortico-cortical feedback circuits
Serotonergic psychedelics (e.g., psilocybin, LSD) have potential to treat psychiatric disorders, with therapeutic effects lasting days to weeks after a single dose. Prominent theories suggest that psychedelics have a lasting effect on hierarchical brain circuits, reducing top-down influence on information processing to facilitate an unbiased, bottom-up reassessment of the world, but direct and concrete evidence for such an effect is lacking. Here we directly tested this hypothesis in both humans and mice, assessing predictive processing in the fronto-visual system in the days after a single psychedelic exposure. Individuals who recently (