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At various points over the past 20 years
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I've studied two fundamental
human experiences
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that have taught me
an awful lot about emotion,
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and that may hold keys
to a revolution in psychiatry.
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The first is how we experience music.
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The second is how we experience
psychedelic drugs
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such as LSD and magic mushrooms,
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or, psilocybin,
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which is the active component
in magic mushrooms.
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You may be wondering
what these two things have in common
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outside of Woodstock --
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after all, music is not
a physical substance.
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It can be described as a limited set
of vibrations in the air
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that can be detected by your ear.
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Music may seem to have more to do
with aesthetics than with biology
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or chemistry.
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Psychedelic drugs on the other hand
are physical substances.
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They are chemical compounds
that you can ingest
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that directly interact
with brain chemistry
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and change your experience of the world.
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This change is temporary
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but the effects of this change
can alter the course of your life.
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But let's face it:
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psychedelics have the potential
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to trigger unexpected
and potentially dangerous effects.
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So what could these two
very different things
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possibly have in common?
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I've found that music and psychedelics
can impact our well-being
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in powerful and complementary ways.
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Music can have a direct
impact on our emotions
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with measurable impacts on the brain;
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psychedelic drugs,
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under the right circumstances,
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may have therapeutic effects.
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These effects can be manifest in patterns
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that we can study
and document with brain scans,
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and together and leveraged
in a purposeful fashion,
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music and psychedelics may have an even
greater healing impact on patients.
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What's more, these effects can be manifest
in healthier and happier lives
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and more integrated personalities.
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I began my journey into the mental
health benefits of music
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long before I ever intended
to make such a journey.
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For roughly half of my life
I've been a musician,
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having played in community orchestras,
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community theaters,
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wedding bands,
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a salsa-meringue band.
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I was a member of a string band
in Philadelphia for many years.
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And for the better part
of my formative years,
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I was the drummer
in a Weezer-Nirvana cover band
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that morphed into a hardcore punk band.
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(Laughter)
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That's right.
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Drummer in a punk band.
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But it wasn't until I really began
my career in psychology and neuroscience
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that I began to also appreciate
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how widely and how deeply
we as a species,
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both implicitly and explicitly,
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use music as a tool to try
to regulate our emotions
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and to heal.
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And for some us, music keeps us going.
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For others, music isn't quite enough.
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For me, this led to some
fascinating questions.
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I began to use music as a tool
to study emotion and memory in the brain.
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My first scientific study was focused
on music-invoked nostalgia.
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Nostalgia's a rich and bittersweet emotion
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that is intimately tied up
with our autobiographical memories.
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We can often encounter nostalgia
in unexpected places.
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You may have had the experience
driving down the highway,
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turning on the radio
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or firing up your favorite music
recommendation service
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and you hear a song
you haven't heard in ages,
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and you get immediately
transported back in time
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and dumped into this immersive memory --
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something you haven't
thought about in ages
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but was very meaningful to you --
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maybe wedding day or senior prom
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or the birth of your first child
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or the death of a loved one.
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Music can serve as a powerful context cue
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for deeply meaningful and intensely vivid
nostalgic memories such as these.
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Nostalgia in a sense is deeply woven
into our sense of self.
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Who are we at our most authentic selves?
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By connecting us
with our emotional histories,
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nostalgia can help us to stave off
sadness, loneliness,
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existential threat
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and even the imminence of death
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and the approaching horizon
of our lives as we age.
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To try to get a better understanding
of how music may tap into nostalgia
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and what that may be doing in the brain,
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I began to work with computational
models of music cognition.
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I applied these models
to interrogate brain activity
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that was recorded
while people were listening
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to nostalgia-evoking
and nonnostalgia evoking music.
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And importantly --
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at least to a brainiac like me --
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I found that nostalgia was able
to recruit a wide network of brain regions
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involved in multiple levels
of difference cognitive processes.
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Whereas nonnostalgic music
could recruit brain regions
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such as Heschl's gyrus,
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involved in basic auditory processing,
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or Broca's area,
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which involved in processing
grammar and syntax
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not only in language but also in music.
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Nostalgia was able to recruit
these brain regions and more.
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Brain regions such as the substantia nigra
involved in reward processing
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or the anterior insula involved
in the visceral experience of emotion
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or brain regions
in the inferior frontal gyrus
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that are involved
in autobiographical memories.
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Nostalgia was also able to recruit
a wide network of brain regions
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in prefrontal, frontal, cingulate,
insular, parietal, occipital
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and subcortical brain regions
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that span nearly all
of our cognitive faculties.
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This may explain why nostalgia
can have such an outsized impact on us.
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But as powerful as it is in the moment,
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the salve of music-evoked
nostalgia eventually fades.
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Nostalgia may be more of a Band-Aid,
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less of an antibiotic
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and typically far from a surgical
intervention for our emotional health.
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Music can draw out nostalgia
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and music and nostalgia
can move our feelings,
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but how do we make these feelings stick?
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After studying the nostalgic brain,
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I joined a team
at Johns Hopkins University
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that was studying the effects
of psychedelic drugs,
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and I quickly began to learn how deeply
a piece of music can impact a person
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during a psychedelic experience.
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I was previously vexed by the difficulty
in predicting precisely
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what musical stimulus would evoke
precisely what response
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within a given individual.
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A song that evokes nostalgia in one person
could just as easily evoke disinterest
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of disgust in another person.
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I began to learn how deeply most music
seemed to impact most people
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during psychedelic experiences.
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Since at least the late '50s,
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the value of using music to help people
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to navigate psychedelic
experiences was clear.
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We continue this tradition
in our modern research,
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asking volunteers to listen to music
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during the course
of a psychedelic therapy session,
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and despite most people being mostly naive
to the music that we play
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before they get into the sessions,
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after these sessions,
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our volunteers practically beg us
for the playlists.
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And some of them report
returning to the songs
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that were most impactful to them
during their psychedelic experience
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weeks, months and even many years
after the experience.
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Somehow these songs can turn
into touchstones
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that can rekindle the most powerful
and impactful and insightful experiences
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that people encountered
during their psychedelic sessions.
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Of course I had to know
what was going on here.
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I began to deploy
my batteries of questionnaires
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and my carefully crafted experiments
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and my big, fancy MRI machines
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to try to determine just what
could be happening
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during these experiences
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that could explain the depth
of impact that people were encountering.
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At a basic psychological level,
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my colleagues and I determined that,
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for instance, LSD can increase
positive emotions
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that are uniquely encountered
during music listening.
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This may have relevance just by itself
for healthy individuals
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as well as people suffering from mood
and substance-use disorders.
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But what was happening in the brain?
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Earlier we learned that the entire brain
listens to nostalgic music.
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When applying computational models
of music cognition
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to interrogate brain activity
that was recorded during music listening
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under the effects of LSD,
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we found that the entire brain
was listening to music
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and psychedelics were turning up the gain.
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Where nostalgia could recruit
brain regions involved in language,
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memory and emotion,
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psychedelics were recruiting
these brain regions
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at least twice as strongly.
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Brain regions such as the thalamus
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that's involved in basic
sensory processing
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or the medial prefrontal cortex
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and the posterior singular cortex,
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which can be involved in memory
and emotion and mental imagery.
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These brain regions were recruited
up to four times as strongly
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during the effects of LSD
than without LSD.
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Psychedelics turn the nob up to 11.
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Sensory information is more
richly experienced in the brain.
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Emotions, memories
and mental imagery are supercharged.
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And it may be the wholesale
and strong recruitment
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of a wide range of brain regions
during these experiences
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that is the necessary key
to unlocking change
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that sets these drugs
and these experiences apart from others.
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And the effects can be longlasting.
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In a study of healthy individuals,
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I demonstrated that a single
high dose of psilocybin
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could reduce negative affect in volunteers
for at least a week after psilocybin,
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and increased positive affect
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for at least a month after a single
high dose of psilocybin.
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The reduction in negative affect
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that we observed after
psilocybin administration
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was accompanied by a reduction
one week after psilocybin
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in the response of a primitive
brain region called the amygdala
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to emotional stimuli.
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In a separate study in patients
with major depressive disorder,
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not only did we observe a substantial
decrease in depression severity
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in most of our patients
after two doses of psilocybin,
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but we also observed a reduction
in the amygdala response
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to negative effective stimuli,
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specifically one week after psilocybin.
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This reduction in amygdala response
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was associated with an enduring
reduction in depression severity
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for at least three months
after psilocybin administration,
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but frankly, we're still counting.
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So what does this all mean?
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It means that music and psychedelics
may be able to alter the entire brain
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for a period of time,
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and that may lead to a change
in neurocircuitry
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that may be stuck in patterns
of negative emotional bias.
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This may be able to give people
a period of relief
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from the grip and the claws
of negative emotion.
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And that may be just enough to give
someone access to perspectives
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on their selves and their lives
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and begin on the road to healing
from years of depression.
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These drugs are early
in stages of research,
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but they're not being researched
for a wide range of medical indications.
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There's a evidence growing
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that psychedelics may be effective
in helping to treat mood disorders
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such as major depressive disorder,
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treatment-resistent depression
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and the depression and anxiety
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that accompany
a late-stage cancer diagnosis.
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There's also eveidence accumulating
that psychedelics may be effective
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in helping to treat a wide range
of substance-use disorders,
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including smoking, drinking
and cocaine use.
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Additional studies
are either being planned
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or are already underway
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to determine whether psychedelics
may be effective in treating
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an even wider range
of intractable disorders
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such as OCD, PTSD, opioid-use disorder
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and anorexia.
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At this point it might be reasonable
to take a step back
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and say, "Are psychedelics
being sold as a panacea?"
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And if so, we should
be rightfully skeptical.
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Why should we expect such a small family
of compounds to be so effective
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in treating such a wide range
of disparate disorders?
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Here's a perspective we might consider.
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Some of these disorders
share a common thread.
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At some level,
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mood disorders and substance-use disorders
involve negative affect
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and a disconnection
from our most authentic selves.
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Psychedelics may break that mold.
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Psychedelics and music
may represent a one-two punch
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that can operate on psychological
neuro processes such as negative affect
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that cut across and contribute
to multiple disorders.
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It may be that targeting such
transdiagnostic processes
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is what's necessary to really help
people to develop the resources
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that they need to begin to recover
from years of depression and substane use.
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They say you never get a second chance
to make a first impression,
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and that may be true
for psychedelic drugs.
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After all, no matter
how much data come out
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for the potential of therapeutic
effects of these drugs,
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there are still some who are stuck
on the stigma from the '60s and '70s:
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myths of the wildly addictive
properties of these drugs
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or myths of genetic abnormalities
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or birth defects after
being exposed to these drugs
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or fears that people are going
to lose their minds
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and go insane,
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or maybe even most pervasive
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is the sense that these effects
are necessarily real
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and that they're a necessary outcome
of having been exposed to these compounds.
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It may be time to change
our thinking on that point.
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No one should expect psychedelic
drugs to work for everyone.
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No one should expect psychedelic
drugs to work for everything.
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They're powerful compounds
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that need to be administered
under carefully controlled circumstances,
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and there are almost certainly
people in this world
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for whom psychedelics
are incredibly dangerous.
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But ...
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antibiotics administered to the wrong
person or the wrong conditions
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can be incredibly dangerous,
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if not worse.
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But administered to the right person
under the right conditions,
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antibiotics save lives.
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Administered to the right people
under the right conditions,
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psychedelic drugs may save lives.
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It can often feel like it's impossible
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to heal our hearts and our minds
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and to grow.
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But I truly believe that we all have
the resources within ourselves
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to do just that.
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The challenge is often identifying
and connecting with those resources.
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And it may be the psychedelics
and music can help people
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to do just that.
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Together, psychedelics and music
may be able to open our minds to change
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and direct that change,
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reconnect us with our most
authentic selves
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and allow us access to the things
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that really allow us to make
meaning in this world
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and reconnect
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with our most authentic selves.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)