Do shrooms make you smarter?
Researchers Juan Sanchez-Ramos and Briony Catlow at the University of South Florida have just started an exciting new study to see if psilocybin (the active component in magic mushrooms) can help promote the birth and development of new brain cells (neurogenesis) in the hippocampus, which is associated with learning and memory.
The study is based on the findings of several researchers who have shown that hippocampal-mediated learning and memory is related to the generation of new neurons in the adult brain.
The proposition that psilocybin impacts cognition, and stimulates hippocampal neurogenesis, is based on the evidence that psilocybin mimics the neurotransmitter serotonin, which is involved in the regulation of neurogenesis in the hippocampus. We're looking forward to hearing about the results from this fascinating study.
You can read more about this and other studies with psychedelic substances on www.maps.org.
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Don Jia - 2008-06-25 12:37:57
Now the bad news: this is all the more reason for the powers that be to ban the darn things. Let’s face it, intelligence – which isn’t the same as specialism - is not an asset in modern society, let alone a quality deemed desirable for many people to have. The powers that be – both of the state of the transglobal corporation – are presently waging an all out war against citizens’/consumers’ capacities to think for themselves. Make no mistake, my friends, their agenda is nothing less than the transformation of humanity at large into a throng of mindless automatons who can be reprogrammed and reconditioned as power sees fit. There are good reasons why nicotine, caffeine and alcohol are rarely even considered drugs in our present society. It is because these substances effect a diminishing of consciousness, and are little more than legal crank, the REAL opium of herd culture.