作者mulkcs (mulkcs)
看板Cognitive
标题[新知] 迷幻研究: 化学反应引发的共感现象
时间Wed Jul 8 04:49:10 2015
这篇蛮有趣的. 本文从Hoffman发现LSD这种迷幻药开始说起. 这种药可以引起多种感觉一
起产生, 例如听到声音也产生视觉效果. 但仍然无法确认这种化学引起的共感和先天的共
感是否相同.先天共感比较常见的是字与色彩, 但化学共感比较常见的是声音与视觉.
文章也有稍微描述共感现象可能是由抑制型的神经传导物质降低所导致, 这可能会带来额
外的神经活化. 这或许要从先天性的共感者身上确认是否有较低神经传导物质产生或较少
的神经传导受器.
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网址:
http://www.neuroscientistnews.com/neuroinsights/trippy-research-chemically-indu
ced-synesthesia (
http://0rz.tw/xYx5I )
Trippy research: chemically-induced synesthesia
In April 1943, scientist Albert Hoffman ingested 250 micrograms of a
substance he had synthesized five years prior. Less than an hour later, he “
perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes
with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors.”1
Hoffman had discovered lysergic acid diethylamide, a psychedelic drug
commonly known as LSD. He had experienced the world’s first acid trip.
Psychedelic drugs like LSD are often associated with experiences that can
only be described as synesthesia—the rare neurological phenomenon in which a
stimulus produces a second concurrent, involuntary experience—although
scientists are still unsure if chemically-induced synesthesia is a genuine
synesthetic experience.
The majority of studies on the topic have focused on congenital synesthesia.
To date, there have only been four direct studies on chemically-induced
synesthesia which were conducted between 1934 and 1966. Indirect studies
picked up again in the early 1990s with the work of neurologist Richard
Cytowic.
Direct studies suggest it’s possible to chemically-induce synesthesia
In 1934, research conducted by E.L. Kelly and published in the Journal of
Experimental Psychology tested auditory-visual synesthesia using five
non-synesthetes who first spent seven-weeks being presented with eight
different tone-color pairs 1000 to 2000 times. The subjects demonstrated no
evidence of developing synesthesia after this initial testing phase. When
they consumed 15g of peyote cactus (estimated to contain between 0.15 and
1.2g of the psychoactive stimulant mescaline), four of the participants
perceived colorful visual imagery and experienced haptic-visual,
kinesthetic-visual, and algesic-color synesthesia. However, the researchers
suggested that consumption of mescaline did not enhance trained associations
and they observed no evidence of spontaneous auditory-visual synesthesia.2
A second study conducted in 1955 by Simpson and McKeller in the Journal of
Mental Science involved two congenital synesthetes (auditory-visual and
multiple types). The researchers themselves acted as non-synesthete controls.
On separate occasions, subjects were given four mescaline doses (between 0.3
and 0.5g) and were then presented with various stimuli (i.e. visual,
auditory, tactile, etc.). Subjects reported experiencing several distinct
types of synesthesia, including auditory-visual, kinesthetic-visual,
tactile-visual, olfactory-visual, and algesic-visual. Synesthetes and
non-synesthetes were equally prone to developing new inducer-concurrent
associations. In addition, one of the congenital synesthetes reported
enhancements of his regular associations. Once again, the researchers
concluded that mescaline seemed to be able to trigger synesthesia among
non-synesthetes, but they also suggested that it could enhance the phenomenon
in congenital synesthetes.3
A third blind study conducted in 1963 by Hartman and Hollister in
Psychopharmacologia compared the effects of mescaline, LSD, and psilocybin
(the psychedelic compound found in certain mushrooms). Eighteen participants
were given each substance a week apart and were subjected to 16 sonic tones
before and after drug administration. Under the influence of LSD and
mescaline, but not psilocybin, participants reported significantly more
auditory-visual associations compared to baseline levels. Less than 50% of
participants experienced auditorily-induced synesthesia under the influence
of the drugs.4
The last direct study, conducted in 1966 by Masters and Houston in The
Varieties of Psychedelic Experience, was extremely informal. In it,
participants were interviewed after consuming psychedelic drugs. The study
covered 206 drug sessions and involved a total of 214 subjects.2 The
researchers reported successfully inducing auditory-visual and
auditory-gustatory synesthesia with LSD, but no other details were provided
in their report.5
Possible mechanisms for chemically-induced synesthesia
Because the genetic mechanisms underlying congenital synesthesia are still
not well understood and chemically-induced studies are so scarce, scientists
are unsure if mechanisms influencing chemically-induced synesthetic episodes
are—or are similar to—genuine synesthetic experiences.
In congenital synesthesia, very little systematic quantitative research has
investigated the neurochemical factors involved. In mechanisms that propose
the phenomenon is promoted by disinhibition, y-aminobutyric acid (GABA) plays
a role in the disruption of inhibitory activity.2,6 In 2008, scientists Brang
and Ramachandran suggested serotonin (5-hydroxytryptophan) may also play a
role.2,7
According to scientist Christopher Sinke from the University of Hannover,
hallucinogens appear to inhibit serotonergic neuron transduction.8 The
majority of hallucinogens affect activity in two areas: the locus coeruleus
and pyramidal cells in the cortex. Because serotonin is primarily an
inhibitory neurotransmitter, when its activity is decreased due to drug
intake, the activity of the next neuron in the chain increases when it is no
longer inhibited. This mechanism would be similar to the disinhibited
feedback models of genuine synesthesia.
Crucial differences between congenital and chemically-induced synesthesia
While any two or more combinations of inducer-concurrent experiences are
possible, in congenital synesthesia the grapheme-colour association is the
most common type. Meanwhile, auditory-visual synesthesia is the most common
form noted in chemically-induced cases (approximately 23%). Additionally,
visual concurrents are more complex in these cases than in congenital cases.
Genuine synesthesia is characterized by consistency and automaticity.
Currently, there is still no clear evidence that chemically-induced
synesthesia is consistent or automatic.
The limitations of scarce research
It is critical to keep in mind when analyzing the existing chemically-induced
research that study participants may have been biased to expect synesthesia
under the influence of psychedelics and that the drugs increased participant
suggestibility. Additionally, as in Albert Hoffman’s initial experience with
LSD in 1943, most studies relied on subjects to self-report their experiences
rather than using more consistent, objective methods to screen or measure
participants.
While the studies discussed here suggest that it is possible to induce
synesthesia using psychedelics, a systematic review conducted in 2013 by the
University of Greenwich and Oxford recommends more rigorous examination of
the subject including placebo-controlled and double blind investigations.2
Promisingly, we have taken steps in this direction with new research
attempting to elucidate the mechanisms that may activate chemically-induced
synesthesia through more controlled studies.9
References
1. "Hallucinogenic Effects of LSD Discovered." History.com. A&E
Television Networks, n.d. Web. 18 June 2015.
2. Luke D, Terhune D (2013) The induction of synaesthesia with chemical
agents: a systematic review. Frontiers in Psychology 4:753. doi:
10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00753
3. Simpson L, McKellar P (1955) Types of synaesthesia. J. Ment. Sci.
101(422):141–147.
4. Hartman AM, Hollister LE (1963) Effect of mescaline, lysergic acid
diethylamide and psilocybin on color perception. Psychopharmacologia
4(6):441-451. doi: 10.1007/BF00403349
5. Masters REL, Houston J (1966) The Varieties of Psychedelic Experience.
London: Turnstone.
6. Hubbard EM, Brang D, Ramachandran VS (2011) The cross-activation
theory at 10. J. Neuropsychol. 5(2):152-177. doi:
10.1111/j.1748-6653.2011.02014.x
7. Brang D, Ramachandran VS (2008) Psychopharmacology of synesthesia: the
role of seroton in S2a receptor activation. Med. Hypotheses 70(4):903-904.
doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2007.09.007
8. Passie T et al. (2012) Genuine and drug-induced synesthesia: A
comparison. Consciousness and Cognition 21(3):1419-1434. doi:
10.1016/j.concog.2012.03.009
9. Brogaard B, Gatzia E (2015) Psilocybin, LSD, Mescaline and
Drug-Induced Synesthesia. Neuropathology of Drug Addictions and Substance
Misuse. (In press)
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