
Artificial intelligence could help us better understand the effects of psychedelic drugs, by analysing narrative reports written by people who are using them.
快猫短视频s barely understand how existing psychedelic drugs work to alter perception and intensify emotions, let alone keep pace with new ones flooding the market 鈥 often sold as 鈥渂ath salts鈥 or 鈥渉erbal incense鈥.
Enter artificial intelligence. of the University of Chicago and colleagues used machine-learning algorithms 鈥 a type of artificial intelligence that can learn about a given subject by analysing massive amounts of data 鈥 to examine 1000 reports uploaded to the website by people who had taken mind-altering drugs.
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They found that the frequency with which certain words appeared could identify the drug taken with 51 per cent accuracy on average 鈥 compared with 10 per cent by chance. MDMA (ecstasy) usage was identified with an accuracy of 87 per cent.
The drug DMT (N,N-dimethyltryptamine) acts on the brain in different ways from the drug Salvia (Salvia divinorum), but the algorithms inferred that both elicit a similar response. This might be because both are typically smoked and so enter the bloodstream quickly, says Baggott. 鈥淪moked psychedelic drugs may 鈥榟it鈥 people hard and fast in a similar way.鈥
Baggott hopes the work will aid research into the effects of new and existing drugs. 鈥淵ou need to start with some theories about the effects of a drug,鈥 he says. 鈥淢achine learning can help us form those theories.鈥
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