| Literature DB >> 31013281 |
Roland R Griffiths1,2, Ethan S Hurwitz1,3, Alan K Davis1, Matthew W Johnson1, Robert Jesse4.
Abstract
Naturally occurring and psychedelic drug-occasioned experiences interpreted as personal encounters with God are well described but have not been systematically compared. In this study, five groups of individuals participated in an online survey with detailed questions characterizing the subjective phenomena, interpretation, and persisting changes attributed to their single most memorable God encounter experience (n = 809 Non-Drug, 1184 psilocybin, 1251 lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), 435 ayahuasca, and 606 N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT)). Analyses of differences in experiences were adjusted statistically for demographic differences between groups. The Non-Drug Group was most likely to choose "God" as the best descriptor of that which was encountered while the psychedelic groups were most likely to choose "Ultimate Reality." Although there were some other differences between non-drug and the combined psychedelic group, as well as between the four psychedelic groups, the similarities among these groups were most striking. Most participants reported vivid memories of the encounter experience, which frequently involved communication with something having the attributes of being conscious, benevolent, intelligent, sacred, eternal, and all-knowing. The encounter experience fulfilled a priori criteria for being a complete mystical experience in approximately half of the participants. More than two-thirds of those who identified as atheist before the experience no longer identified as atheist afterwards. These experiences were rated as among the most personally meaningful and spiritually significant lifetime experiences, with moderate to strong persisting positive changes in life satisfaction, purpose, and meaning attributed to these experiences. Among the four groups of psychedelic users, the psilocybin and LSD groups were most similar and the ayahuasca group tended to have the highest rates of endorsing positive features and enduring consequences of the experience. Future exploration of predisposing factors and phenomenological and neural correlates of such experiences may provide new insights into religious and spiritual beliefs that have been integral to shaping human culture since time immemorial.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31013281 PMCID: PMC6478303 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0214377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant characteristics in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group.
| Measure | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age at time of study participation in years (mean, SD) | 56.2 (13.7) | 34.1 (12.8) | p≤0.001 |
| Age at time of encounter experience in years (mean, SD) | 35.7 (15.0) | 25.3 (9.1) | p≤0.001 |
| Years since the experience (mean, SD) | 20.5 (15.4) | 8.8 (10.6) | p≤0.001 |
| Sex (% male) | 27% | 79% | p≤0.001 |
| Race (%) | p≤0.001 | ||
| White | 93% | 86% | |
| Black/African American | 1% | 1% | |
| Asian | 2% | 3% | |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 0% | 0% | |
| Native American | 1% | 1% | |
| Mixed Race | 3% | 9% | |
| Ethnicity (% Hispanic) | 4% | 9% | p≤0.001 |
| Education (%) | p≤0.001 | ||
| No high school diploma or equivalent (GED) | 1% | 3% | |
| High school diploma or equivalent (GED) | 2% | 13% | |
| Some college or vocational training | 23% | 42% | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 30% | 25% | |
| Master’s degree | 27% | 12% | |
| Advanced professional degree | 16% | 5% | |
| Annual household income (%) | p≤0.001 | ||
| Under $25,000 | 11% | 36% | |
| $25,000—$49,999 | 22% | 27% | |
| $50,000—$74,999 | 17% | 13% | |
| $75,000—$99,999 | 13% | 8% | |
| $100,000—$150,000 | 21% | 10% | |
| $150,000 + | 15% | 6% | |
| Ever Married (%) | 76% | 46% | p≤0.001 |
| Country of residence (%) | p≤0.001 | ||
| United States | 75% | 59% | |
| Canada, Europe, Australia | 21% | 31% | |
| Other (%) | 4% | 10% |
1 Subject characteristics at time of survey completion unless otherwise specified.
2 Dichotomous demographic variables were analyzed with Chi-square to compare between Non-Drug Group and Psychedelic Group. Continuous demographic variables were analyzed with ANOVA. Results were considered significant when p≤0.001.
3 Proportion White race compared between Non-Drug Group and Psychedelic Group.
4 Proportion having bachelor’s degree or higher compared between Non-Drug Group and Psychedelic Group.
5 Proportion having income less than $50,000 compared between Non-Drug Group and Psychedelic Group
6 Proportion with United States country of residence compared between Non-Drug Group and Psychedelic Group.
Participant characteristics for Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,,.
| Measure | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at time of study participation in years (mean, SD) | 56.2 (13.7) | ||||
| Age at time of encounter experience in years (mean, SD) | 35.7 (15.0) | 35.1 (11.3)a | |||
| Years since the experience (mean, SD) | 20.5 (15.4) | ||||
| Sex (% male) | 27% | ||||
| Race (% White) | 93% | 87%a | |||
| Ethnicity (% Hispanic) | 4% | 8%a | |||
| Education (% Bachelor’s college degree or higher) | 74% | ||||
| Annual household income (% <$50,000) | 33% | ||||
| Ever Married (%) | 76% | ||||
| Country of residence (% United States resident) | 75% |
1 Participant characteristics at time of survey completion unless otherwise specified.
2 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
3 Dichotomous demographic variables were analyzed with a general linear model with a logit link. Continuous demographic were analyzed with ANOVA. Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Pairwise comparisons among groups were adjusted using Bonferroni method to control for Type 1 error.
Details of the encounter in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group |
|---|---|---|
| Went into the experience with the intention of encountering that which was encountered | 16% | 22% |
| The encounter was initiated by that which was encountered (not by me) | 55% | |
| Was alone (not with other people) at the time of the encounter | 58% | |
| Visual | 48% | |
| Auditory (aural) | 36% | |
| Bodily sensation/tactile (sense of touch) | 43% | 48% |
| Taste (gustatory) | 3% | |
| Smell (olfactory) | 6% | 12% |
| Extrasensory | 64% | |
| There was communication (1-way or 2-way exchange of information) | 63% | 67% |
| Communication was a 2-way exchange of information | 22% | 25% |
| Communication was a 1-way exchange of information (from it to you) | 23% | 25% |
| Communication was a 1-way exchange of information (from you to it) | 4% | 2% |
| Communication was visual (e.g. gestures) | 15% | |
| Communication was verbal-auditory | 26% | 21% |
| Communication was somatic (e.g. touch/kinesthetic) | 17% | 14% |
| Communication was extrasensory-telepathic | 45% | |
| You had an emotional response during the encounter | 91% | 88% |
| That which was encountered had an emotional response during the encounter | 23% | 25% |
| You ascertained a message, task, mission, or insight from the encounter | 78% | 75% |
| You acquired predictions about the future | 21% | 24% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group.
2 Data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed the items as positive. Statistical comparisons were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table A in S1 File.
Details of the encounter in the Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Went into the experience with the intention of encountering that which was encountered | 16% | 20%a | 18%a | ||
| The encounter was initiated by that which was encountered (not by me) | 55% | 55%a | 56%a | ||
| Was alone (not with other people) at the time of the encounter | 58% | ||||
| Visual | 48% | ||||
| Auditory (aural) | 36% | 45%a | 49%a,b | ||
| Bodily sensation/tactile (sense of touch) | 43% | 46%a | 50%a | 47%a | 48%a |
| Taste (gustatory) | 3% | 8%a | |||
| Smell (olfactory) | 6% | 10%a | 13%a | 11%a | 13%a |
| Extrasensory | 64% | ||||
| There was communication (1-way or 2-way exchange of information) | 63% | 64%a | 60%a | ||
| Communication was a 2-way exchange of information | 22% | 24%a | 20%a | 28%a | |
| Communication was a 1-way exchange of information (from it to you) | 23% | 23%a | 22%a | 22%a | |
| Communication was a 1-way exchange of information (from you to it) | 4% | 2%a | 2%a | 2%a | 1%a |
| Communication was visual (e.g. gestures) | 15% | 23%a,b | 21%a | ||
| Communication was verbal-auditory | 26% | 21%a | 19%a | 25%a | 25%a |
| Communication was somatic (e.g. touch/kinesthetic) | 17% | 12%a | 12%a | 18%a | 18%a |
| Communication was extrasensory-telepathic | 45% | 52%a | |||
| You had an emotional response during the encounter | 91% | 88%a | 89%a | 86%a | 89%a |
| That which was encountered had an emotional response during the encounter | 23% | 23%a | 22%a | 28%a,b | 33%b |
| You ascertained a message, task, mission, or insight from the encounter | 78% | 74%a | 73%a | 82%a | 74%a |
| You acquired predictions about the future | 21% | 24%a | 25%a | 27%a | 21%a |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
2 Data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed the item as positive. Statistical comparisons were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Pairwise comparisons were adjusted using Bonferroni method and results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table B in S1 File.
Memory, realism, and mystical features of the encounter experience in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group |
|---|---|---|
| Vividness of memories of the encounter | 91.9 (14.2) | |
| Superficial dream-like level of reality | 25.0 (35.3) | |
| Reality similar to everyday normal consciousness | 54.5 (40.2) | |
| More real than everyday normal consciousness | 72.7 (36.3) | 76.5 (32.2) |
| Mystical factor | .73 (0.22) | |
| Positive mood factor | .78 (0.21) | |
| Transcendence of time and space factor | .54 (0.33) | |
| Ineffability factor | .77 (0.25) | |
| Total Score | .70 (0.21) | |
| Percentage of participants fulfilling criteria for complete experience | 43% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group.
2 For continuous measures, data are means and standard deviations. Dichotomous data for complete mystical experiences are percentage of participants in the group. Statistical comparisons for continuous and dichotomous data were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimates are presented in Table C in S1 File.
Memory, realism, and mystical features of the encounter experience in the Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vividness of memories of the encounter | 91.9 (14.2) | ||||
| Superficial dream-like level of reality | 25.0 (35.3) | ||||
| Reality similar to everyday normal consciousness | 54.5 (40.2) | ||||
| More real than everyday normal consciousness | 72.7 (36.3) | 74.7 (32.5)a | 76.8 (32.5)a | 79.4 (30.3)a | 77.5 (32.2)a |
| Mystical factor | .73 (0.22) | ||||
| Positive mood factor | .78 (0.21) | .79 (0.18)a | .79 (0.19)a | .81 (0.17)a | .81 (0.18)a |
| Transcendence of time and space factor | .54 (0.33) | ||||
| Ineffability factor | .77 (0.25) | ||||
| Total Score | .70 (0.21) | ||||
| Percentage of participants fulfilling criteria for complete experience | 43% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
2 For continuous measures, data are means and standard deviations. Dichotomous data for complete mystical experiences are percentage of participants in the group. Statistical comparisons for continuous and dichotomous data were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). For both types of analyses, pairwise comparisons were adjusted using Bonferroni method and results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table D in S1 File.
Interpretation of that which was encountered in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group,,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group |
|---|---|---|
| God (the God of your understanding) | 41% | |
| Ultimate Realty | 26% | |
| Higher Power | 15% | 19% |
| An aspect or emissary of God (e.g. an angel) | 18% | |
| Benevolent (i.e. kind, compassionate, altruistic) | 86% | |
| Intelligent | 80% | 78% |
| Sacred | 81% | 71% |
| Conscious (i.e. self-aware) | 71% | 68% |
| Eternal | 70% | 70% |
| All Knowing | 66% | 59% |
| Agency (e.g. could it affect outcomes, events, or material objects in this reality) | 47% | |
| Petitionable (e.g. in response to prayer or petition, it might change events or circumstances) | 32% | |
| Positively Judgmental (e.g. inclined toward strong approval or reward) | 23% | 29% |
| Negatively Judgmental (e.g. inclined toward strong disapproval or harsh punishment) | 5% | 6% |
| Malicious (i.e., unkind, cruel, vengeful) | 1% | |
| That which was encountered existed, as least in part, in some other dimension or reality | 68% | 69% |
| You were completely the same as that which was encountered | 32% | |
| That which was encountered continued to exist after the encounter | 74% | 65% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group.
2 Data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed the items as positive. Statistical comparisons were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table E in S1 File.
3 Response options for these questions were Yes, No, and I don’t know.
Interpretation of that which was encountered in Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,,.
| Items | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| God (the God of your understanding) | 41% | ||||
| Ultimate Realty | 26% | ||||
| Higher Power | 15% | 19%a,b | 16%a | 21%a,b | 25%b |
| An aspect or emissary of God (e.g. an angel) | 18% | 9%a | 12%a | 12%a | |
| Benevolent (i.e. kind, compassionate, altruistic) | 86% | 85%a | 75%a | ||
| Intelligent | 80% | 73%a | 73%a | ||
| Sacred | 81% | 71%a,b | 68%b | 80%a | 69%a,b |
| Conscious (i.e. self-aware) | 71% | 62%a | 64%a | 77%b | |
| Eternal | 70% | 70%a | 72%a | 75%a | 63%a |
| All Knowing | 66% | 58%a | 58%a | 66%a | 59%a |
| Agency (e.g. could it affect outcomes, events, or material objects in this reality) | 47% | 41%a | |||
| Petitionable (e.g. in response to prayer or petition, it might change events or circumstances) | 32% | 26%a | |||
| Positively Judgmental (e.g. inclined toward strong approval or reward) | 23% | 29%a | 26%a | 29%a | 33%a |
| Negatively Judgmental (e.g. inclined toward strong disapproval or harsh punishment) | 5% | 8%a | 8%a | 6%a | 10%a |
| Malicious (i.e., unkind, cruel, vengeful) | 1% | ||||
| That which was encountered existed, as least in part, in some other dimension or reality | 68% | 65%a | 66%a,b | ||
| You were completely the same as that which was encountered | 32% | 42%a | |||
| That which was encountered continued to exist after the encounter | 74% | 64%a | 68%a | 75%a |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
2 Data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed the items as positive. Statistical comparisons were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Pairwise comparisons were adjusted using Bonferroni method and results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table F in S1 File.
3 Response options for these questions were Yes, No, and I don’t know.
Comparison of encounter experience relative to other lifetime experiences in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group,,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group |
|---|---|---|
| How personally meaningful was the encounter | 6.85 (1.14) | 6.91 (1.06) |
| How spiritually significant was the encounter | 6.91 (1.30) | 7.05 (1.31) |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the encounter | 5.94 (2.19) | |
| How psychologically challenging was the encounter | 4.21 (2.79) | |
| How personally meaningful was the encounter | 74% | 78% |
| How spiritually significant was the encounter | 78% | 83% |
| How personally psychologically insight was the encounter | 58% | 67% |
| How psychologically challenging was the encounter | 32% | 44% |
| How personally meaningful was the encounter | 28% | 27% |
| How spiritually significant was the encounter | 34% | 42% |
| How personally psychologically insight was the encounter | 22% | 27% |
| How psychologically challenging was the encounter | 12% | 17% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group.
2 For continuous measures, data are means and standard deviations. Dichotomous data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed the item as positive. Statistical comparisons for continuous and dichotomous data were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimates are presented in Table G in S1 File.
3 Rating options ranged from 1 = no more than routine, everyday experience; 5 = similar to experiences that occur on average once every 5 years; 6 = among the 10 most in my life; 7 = among the 5 most of my life; 8 = the single most of my life.
Comparison of encounter experience relative to other lifetime experiences in the Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| How personally meaningful was the encounter | 6.85 (1.14) | 6.83 (1.05)a | 6.87 (1.10)a,b | 7.13 (0.88)b | 6.97 (1.07)a,b |
| How spiritually significant was the encounter | 6.91 (1.30) | 6.99 (1.43)a | 6.97 (1.41)a | 7.14 (1.26)a,b | |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the encounter | 5.94 (2.19) | ||||
| How psychologically challenging was the encounter | 4.21 (2.79) | 5.13 (2.41)a | |||
| How personally meaningful was the encounter | 74% | 75%a | 77%a,b | 83%b | 81%a,b |
| How spiritually significant was the encounter | 78% | 81%a | 81%a | 85%a,b | |
| How personally psychologically insight was the encounter | 58% | 65%a | 68%a | 71%a | 67%a |
| How psychologically challenging was the encounter | 32% | 42%a | 44%a | 46%a | 47%a |
| How personally meaningful was the encounter | 28% | 26%a | 36%b | 30%a,b | |
| How spiritually significant was the encounter | 34% | 41%a | 40%a | 47%a | 47%a |
| How personally psychologically insight was the encounter | 22% | 24%a | 28%a,b | 34%b | 29%a,b |
| How psychologically challenging was the encounter | 12% | 14%a | 18%a,b | 21%b | 18%a,b |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
2 For continuous measures, data are means and standard deviations. Dichotomous data are percentage of participants in the group that endorsed the item as positive. Statistical comparisons for continuous and dichotomous data were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). For both types of analyses, pairwise comparisons were adjusted using Bonferroni method. Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table H in S1 File.
3 Rating options ranged from 1 = no more than routine, everyday experience; 5 = similar to experiences that occur on average once every 5 years; 6 = among the 10 most in my life; 7 = among the 5 most of my life; 8 = the single most of my life.
Persisting changes attributed to the encounter in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group,.
| Questionnaire Item | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group |
|---|---|---|
| Personal sense of well-being or life satisfaction | 2.38 (0.99) | 2.21 (1.03) |
| Your life’s purpose | 2.16 (1.08) | 1.97 (1.14) |
| Your life’s meaning | 2.21 (1.07) | 1.99 (1.15) |
| Your social relationships (e.g. family, friends, neighbors, strangers etc.) | 1.76 (1.31) | 1.67 (1.25) |
| Your spiritual awareness in everyday life | 2.44 (0.86) | |
| Your attitudes about life | 2.27 (1.00) | 2.18 (1.00) |
| Your attitudes about self | 2.16 (1.07) | 2.06 (1.06) |
| Your mood | 1.54 (1.21) | 1.53 (1.19) |
| Your behavior | 1.77 (1.15) | 1.58 (1.14) |
| Desirable change in contemplative, prayer, or meditation practice | 89% | 85% |
| Undesirable change in contemplative, prayer, or meditation practice | 1% | 1% |
| Desirable change in understanding religious or spiritual traditions other than your own | 79% | 86% |
| Undesirable change in understanding religious or spiritual traditions other than your own | 1% | 2% |
| Decreased fear of death | 57% | |
| Increased fear of death | 1% | 3% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group.
2 For continuous measures, data are means and standard deviations. Dichotomous data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed the item as positive. Statistical comparisons for continuous and dichotomous data were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimates are presented in Table I in S1 File.
3 Rating options ranged from -3 = Strong negative change that I consider undesirable to +2 Moderate positive change that I consider desirable and +3 = Strong positive change that I consider desirable.
Persisting changes attributed to the encounter in the Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Items | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal sense of well-being or life satisfaction | 2.38 (0.99) | 2.17 (1.03)a | 2.14 (1.10)a | 2.46 (0.84)b | 2.26 (0.97)a,b |
| Your life’s purpose | 2.16 (1.08) | 1.94 (1.13)a | 1.92 (1.20)a | 2.16 (0.98)a | 1.99 (1.14)a |
| Your life’s meaning | 2.21 (1.07) | 1.99 (1.15)a,b | 2.20 (1.01)a | 2.02 (1.12)a,b | |
| Your social relationships (e.g. family, friends, neighbors, strangers etc.) | 1.76 (1.31) | 1.68 (1.21)a | 1.54 (1.31) | 2.03 (1.09)b | 1.69 (1.25)a |
| Your spiritual awareness in everyday life | 2.44 (0.86) | 2.36 (0.85)a | 2.21 (0.95)a,b | ||
| Your attitudes about life | 2.27 (1.00) | 2.14 (1.01)a | 2.14 (1.04)a | 2.36 (0.84)b | 2.24 (0.98)a,b |
| Your attitudes about self | 2.16 (1.07) | 2.03 (1.06)a | 2.00 (1.12)a | 2.30 (0.84)b | 2.10 (1.03)a,b |
| Your mood | 1.54 (1.21) | 1.52 (1.19)a | 1.39 (1.24)a | 1.63 (1.16)a,b | |
| Your behavior | 1.77 (1.15) | 1.56 (1.15)b | 1.90 (0.96)a | 1.64 (1.13)a,b | |
| Desirable change in contemplative, prayer, or meditation practice | 89% | 86%a | 83%a | 88%a | 85%a |
| Undesirable change in contemplative, prayer, or meditation practice | 1% | 1%a | 1%a | 1%a | 1%a |
| Desirable change in understanding religious or spiritual traditions other than your own | 79% | 85%a | 86%a | 87%a | 86%a |
| Undesirable change in understanding religious or spiritual traditions other than your own | 1% | 3%a | 1%a | 1%a | 2%a |
| Decreased fear of death | 57% | 70%a,b | 67%a | ||
| Increased fear of death | 1% | 3%a | 4%a | 3%a | 3%a |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
2 For continuous measures, data are means and standard deviations. Dichotomous data are percentage of participants in the group that endorsed the items as positive. Statistical comparisons for continuous and dichotomous data were adjusted for eight covariates (see Statistical section). For both types of analyses, pairwise comparisons were adjusted using Bonferroni method. Results were considered significant when p≤0.001. Estimated means and standard errors of the estimate are presented in Table J in S1 File.
3 Rating options ranged from -3 = Strong negative change that I consider undesirable to +2 Moderate positive change that I consider desirable and +3 = Strong positive change that I consider desirable.
Religious orientation before and after the encounter experience for Non-Drug Group and the combined Psychedelic Group,,.
| Measure | Non-Drug Group | Psychedelic Group |
|---|---|---|
| Identification as atheist (percentage of group) | ||
| Before the experience | 3% | |
| After the experience | 1% | |
| Identification with major monotheistic tradition | ||
| Before the experience | 47% | |
| After the experience | 41% | |
| Identification as Other (not atheist or major monotheistic tradition) | ||
| Before the experience | 50% | |
| After the experience | 59% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group.
2 Data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed identification with the religious orientation. Statistical comparisons between groups were conducted with Chi Square tests. Pairwise comparisons between groups for each of the religious affiliation categories were conducted with z tests for independent proportions with Bonferroni adjustment (p≤0.05). In both groups, identification as atheist decreased significantly from before to after the experience (p≤0.05, z-tests for dependent proportions with Bonferroni adjustment).
3 Participants were asked to select the best descriptor from among 24 descriptors provided to designate their religious orientation immediately before the encounter experience and again after the experience. For analysis, data are expressed in three categories: atheist (those choosing the atheist descriptor); monotheist (those choosing Christian, Jewish or Islam descriptors), or other.
Religious orientation before and after the encounter experience for Non-Drug, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, and DMT groups,,.
| Measure | Non-Drug Group | Psilocybin Group | LSD Group | Ayahuasca Group | DMT Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Identification as atheist (percentage of group) | |||||
| Before the experience | 3% | ||||
| After the experience | 1% | 3%a | |||
| Identification with major monotheistic tradition | |||||
| Before the experience | 47% | ||||
| After the experience | 41% | ||||
| Identification as Other (not atheist or major monotheistic tradition) | |||||
| Before the experience | 50% | ||||
| After the experience | 59% |
1 Within a row, bold font indicates significant difference from the Non-Drug Group; for the drug groups, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different.
2 Data are the percentage of the participants in the group that endorsed identification with the religious orientation. Statistical comparisons between groups were conducted with Chi Square tests. Pairwise comparisons between groups for each of the religious affiliation categories were conducted with z tests for independent proportions with Bonferroni adjustment (p≤0.05). In all five groups, identification as atheist decreased significantly from before to after the experience (p≤0.05, z-tests for dependent proportions with Bonferroni adjustment).
3 See Table 13 for explanation of religious orientation categories.
Fig 1Similarities and differences in God encounter experiences between Non-Drug and psychedelic participants.
Summary of notable similarities and differences in details, features, interpretation, and persisting changes of God encounter experiences between the Non-Drug Group (naturally occurring experiences) and the combined Psychedelic Group (psychedelic-occasioned experiences). Approximate percentages of the participants in the groups that endorsed the item are presented for some items; actual percentages are presented in Tables 3–11 and Results section.