Affiliation:
1. Data Sciences Platform Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Cambridge Massachusetts USA
2. Department of Psychiatry SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University Brooklyn New York USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveCan machine learning (ML) enable data‐driven discovery of how changes in sentiment correlate with different psychoactive experiences? We investigate by training models directly on text testimonials from a diverse 52‐drug pharmacopeia.MethodsUsing large language models (i.e. BERT) and 11,816 publicly‐available testimonials, we predicted 28‐dimensions of sentiment across each narrative, and then validated these predictions with adjudication by a clinical psychiatrist. BERT was then fine‐tuned to predict biochemical and demographic information from these narratives. Lastly, canonical correlation analysis linked the drugs' receptor affinities with word usage, revealing 11 statistically‐significant latent receptor‐experience factors, each mapped to a 3D cortical Atlas.ResultsThese methods elucidate a neurobiologically‐informed, sequence‐sensitive portrait of drug‐induced subjective experiences. The models' results converged, revealing a pervasive distinction between the universal psychedelic heights of feeling in contrast to the grim, mundane, and personal experiences of addiction and mental illness. Notably, MDMA was linked to “Love”, DMT and 5‐MeO‐DMT to “Mystical Experiences” and “Entities and Beings”, and other tryptamines to “Surprise”, “Curiosity” and “Realization".ConclusionsML methods can create unified and robust quantifications of subjective experiences with many different psychoactive substances and timescales. The representations learned are evocative and mutually confirmatory, indicating great potential for ML in characterizing psychoactivity.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Reference54 articles.
1. Memory in chains: Modeling primacy and recency effects in memory for order;Altmann;AIB Proceedings,2000
2. Trips and neurotransmitters: Discovering principled patterns across 6850 hallucinogenic experiences
3. Validation of the revised Mystical Experience Questionnaire in experimental sessions with psilocybin
4. Berndt D. J. &Clifford J.(1994).Using dynamic time warping to find patterns in time series. Retrieved fromhttps://www.aaai.org/Library/Workshops/1994/ws94‐03‐031.php
5. Automated design of ligands to polypharmacological profiles