Research Topic: Default Mode Network

Leveraging psychedelic neuroscience to boost human creativity using artificial intelligence

Psychedelic drugs like LSD and psilocybin enhance creativity by disrupting the brain’s Default Mode Network, allowing people to break free from rigid thinking patterns. This paper proposes that artificial intelligence systems could be designed to mimic these same cognitive effects—introducing novel information, making unexpected connections, and gradually expanding comfort with new ideas—thereby enhancing human creativity without drugs. By personalizing AI systems to each person’s personality type and gradually increasing novelty levels, these tools could make creative thinking accessible to people who might not naturally gravitate toward it.

Read More »

Catalyst for change: Psilocybin’s antidepressant mechanisms—A systematic review

This research review examines how psilocybin, a compound from certain mushrooms, may help treat depression by creating changes in both brain function and psychological experience. Within supportive therapeutic settings, psilocybin appears to increase cognitive flexibility, help people better process emotions, and restore a sense of connection to themselves, others, and the world. The antidepressant benefits seem to work through a combination of direct brain changes and psychotherapeutic factors, rather than through pure pharmacological action alone.

Read More »

Exploring neural markers of dereification in meditation based on EEG and personalized models of electrophysiological brain states

Researchers developed a new brain-monitoring technique called the Inner Dereification Index that can detect when someone is meditating versus mind-wandering using only a brief EEG recording. By analyzing electrical activity in specific brain regions involved in self-awareness and personal thoughts, the method can accurately track meditation progress in real-time with 99.6% accuracy. The technique works with minimal training data and shows that certain meditation practices—particularly Tibetan Buddhist techniques aimed at experiencing the emptiness of self—create distinctive brain patterns. This breakthrough could enable real-time meditation feedback devices and personalized meditation guidance.

Read More »
Scroll to Top