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1 omenology qualitatively similar to classical psychedelics.
2 edatives, stimulants, heroin or opiates, and psychedelics.
3  regarded as the quintessential contemporary psychedelic [2].
4 ircuit mechanisms underlying the response to psychedelic and antipsychotic drugs might lead to unific
5  identified that might be the target both of psychedelics and the atypical and glutamate classes of a
6 pothesis holds that the key facts concerning psychedelics are partially explained in terms of increas
7                               Ayahuasca is a psychedelic beverage of Amazonian indigenous origin with
8                       Ayahuasca is a natural psychedelic brew, which contains dimethyltryptamine (DMT
9  acid diethylamide (LSD) is the prototypical psychedelic drug, but its effects on the human brain hav
10 assic psychedelic users (n = 18,138) and non-psychedelic drug-using respondents (n = 78,236).
11 B receptor, the first such structure for any psychedelic drug.
12 eceptor densities (the key site of action of psychedelic drugs [4]).
13 trongly imply that the subjective effects of psychedelic drugs are caused by decreased activity and c
14 mportant advance in scientific research with psychedelic drugs at a time of growing interest in their
15                                              Psychedelic drugs have a long history of use in healing
16                                              Psychedelic drugs produce profound changes in consciousn
17  (MDMA), best known for their illegal use as psychedelic drugs, are showing promise as therapeutics i
18  frequently seen in self-reports of users of psychedelic drugs.
19 eurons are thought to mediate the actions of psychedelic drugs; the native function of these receptor
20                           Psilocybin's acute psychedelic effects typically became detectable 30-60 mi
21                         LSD induces profound psychedelic effects, including changes in the meaning of
22 irst English language report on LSD in 1950, psychedelics enjoyed a short-lived relationship with psy
23 phenomenological reports of the intensity of psychedelic experience.
24 activity are relatively preserved during the psychedelic experience.
25           Here we used psilocybin, a classic psychedelic found in magic mushrooms, and a task-free fu
26                Each category of drug, except psychedelics, had genetic influences unique to itself (i
27                                              Psychedelics have been used by indigenous cultures for m
28  present a general new 2D J-resolved method, PSYCHEDELIC, in which all homonuclear couplings are supp
29  as the parent PSYCHE pure shift experiment, PSYCHEDELIC offers a robust method for chemists seeking
30 ngs suggest that the sustained occurrence of psychedelic phenomenology constitutes an elevated level
31                             Here we describe psychedelic (psc), a new mutant of maize (Zea mays) that
32 ve serotonin 2A receptor agonist and classic psychedelic psilocin.
33 in the mid-1960s effectively ended all major psychedelic research programs.
34 ions on the promises and pitfalls of renewed psychedelic research, with a focus on the development of
35 0s, there has been a steady revival of human psychedelic research: last year saw reports on the first
36 dings suggest that the subjective effects of psychedelics result from a desynchronization of ongoing
37 that these measures have been applied to the psychedelic state and, crucially, that they have yielded
38 reater influence on visual processing in the psychedelic state, thereby defining its hallucinatory qu
39 tion from normal waking consciousness to the psychedelic state.
40    What is the level of consciousness of the psychedelic state?
41 red states of consciousness induced by three psychedelic substances: psilocybin, ketamine and LSD.
42                                  Research on psychedelics such as lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) an
43                                  Plant-based psychedelics, such as psilocybin, have an ancient histor
44 ory and consciousness-altering properties of psychedelics that inform on how they can model certain p
45 eported greater well-being than both classic psychedelic users (n = 18,138) and non-psychedelic drug-
46 orted less problematic drinking than classic psychedelic users, although both groups reported greater
47 s and less problematic drinking than classic psychedelic users.
48 erved acute effects of psilocybin and other 'psychedelics' yet were related to clinical outcomes.

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