Classical psychedelic microdosing, mood, and cognitive function: An umbrella review with narrative synthesis
Yiğit Özaydın, Buket Canlan ÖzaydınBackground:
Psychedelic microdosing—repeated sub-perceptual doses of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or psilocybin—has attracted scientific interest as a potential mood and cognitive intervention. The evidence base remains methodologically heterogeneous and vulnerable to expectancy bias.
Methods:
We conducted an umbrella review with narrative synthesis following Joanna Briggs Institute guidance and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) 2020 standards (International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews [PROSPERO]: 2020 standards (PROSPERO: CRD420251077340). Six databases were searched through February 2026. Eligible studies were systematic reviews and/or meta-analyses examining microdosing effects (⩽20 μg LSD or ⩽3 mg psilocybin per session) on mood or cognitive outcomes in adults. Quality was appraised with A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews-2; primary-study overlap was quantified via corrected covered area (CCA).
Results:
Three meta-analyses met quantitative criteria, drawing on 14 studies (13 unique samples,
Conclusions:
Current evidence does not support cognitive enhancement through microdosing; the only consistent controlled finding runs counter to popular claims: microdosing was associated with a small but reliable impairment of cognitive control. Observed mood benefits are not replicated under blinded conditions, consistent with expectancy-driven responding. Adequately powered, preregistered, expectancy-controlled trials are required before clinical recommendations can be made.