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Neuroscience JUST Did the IMPOSSIBLE

2025-12-13 Howto & Style
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Chase Hughes
Chase Hughes
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Free INTENSIVE behavior science training: https://nci.university/opt-in-page-808244 Link to original paper: https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(25)01305-4 A neuroscience paper published in Cell just days ago answers a question researchers have been trying to solve for years: what actually changes in the brain during a psilocybin experience—and why those changes can last. Using a genetically modified rabies virus as a neural tracer, researchers were able to map—cell by cell—how psilocybin alters brain connectivity. This allowed them to see, for the first time, which brain regions gain connections, which lose them, and how those changes depend on what the brain is doing during the experience itself. The findings help explain long-standing observations discussed by neuroscientists, psychiatrists, and researchers often referenced on platforms like Huberman Lab: • Why psilocybin can reduce depression and anxiety • Why the default mode network quiets during psychedelic states • Why sensory perception feels intensified • Why context and mental state during a trip matter so much • Why a single experience can lead to lasting psychological change One of the most important results from the study is this: only brain regions that are active during the psilocybin experience undergo lasting rewiring. Inactive regions do not change. That finding has major implications for mental health treatment, psychotherapy, and our understanding of how perception, mood, and identity are shaped at the neural level. In this video, I walk through: • How the rabies tracer virus works and why it was used • What changed in sensory, emotional, and self-referential brain networks • How this relates to depression, anxiety, PTSD, and trauma • What this discovery means for future psychedelic research

Top Comments (10)

@BoreasCastel 2025-12-14

The chance of this not being used for evil is zero.

10.6k 655 replies
@vetblue 2025-12-13

im a disabled infantry vet with tbi traumatic brain injury...ive used mushrooms once a month for 15 years now and it changed my life....i seat on my back porch and eat 7-8 g and spend the next 4-6 hours in a different dimension but also consciously working through my issues. Hard to explain but once I come back to reality the weight of the world is lifted off my shoulders and i can control my emotions .... the anger and depression are much more manageable for a few weeks after a session, clearer thoughts and motivation to live comes back...

10.0k 931 replies
@JaguarPanda 2025-12-13

Something tells me this knowledge will end up becoming a new weapon instead of actually being used to help people

6.4k 331 replies
@AnnemieM 2025-12-13

Very interesting. The only thing is, it is not your consciousness that is changing, it is your perception. That is a very important difference.

2.2k 183 replies
@Alorand 2025-12-24

We got MK Ultra 2.0 before GTA6?

2.0k 81 replies
@NiMareQ 2026-01-08

7:34 "You become what you pay attention to" let that sink in.

1.1k 101 replies
@PentarchRise 2026-01-05

Full study is called “Psilocybin triggers an activity-dependent rewiring of large-scale cortical networks” for those interested.

728 25 replies
@BillJohnston-v6f 2026-01-15

Micro dosing really helped me in my battle against depression and anxiety. Magic mushrooms are really incredible when used right.

438 11 replies
@kendrickkelley-r6t 2026-02-12

If it can be abused, it IS being abused.

10
@TheSocialLeftist 2026-03-26

This is dystopic. They will use this technology to make us actual slaves.

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