Latest Research
THE FUTURE OF HEALTH OPTIMIZATION
A new era of wellbeing is emerging: not fixing what is broken, but optimizing how we feel, think, and age. Psilocybin sits right at that frontier.
For most of modern history, health care has meant treating illness once it appears. A quiet shift is now underway, toward a science of optimization: supporting the body and mind before anything goes wrong, and helping us live not just longer, but better.
What makes psilocybin so interesting is that most cells in the body carry serotonin receptors, not only those in the brain. That means its effects may reach far beyond mood: into how our brain adapts, how our cells renew, and how gracefully we age.
Finding One
IT HELPS THE BRAIN GROW NEW CONNECTIONS
Chronic stress and low mood physically shrink the brain, thinning out the tiny connection points between neurons called dendritic spines. Research shows psilocybin helps them grow back.
A stressed or low brain loses dendritic spines, the tiny connection points between neurons. Fewer spines means more rigid, stuck thinking.
Illustration based on Shao et al. (2021), Yale University, published in Neuron. Simplified for clarity.
Finding Two
IT MAY EXTEND LIFESPAN ITSELF
In a landmark 2025 study from Emory University, psilocybin did something no one expected: it helped cells and animals live measurably longer.
Aged mice given psilocybin survived longer than untreated mice, and did so without losing body weight or eating differently.
The Mechanism
HOW ONE COMPOUND DOES SO MUCH
Researchers are still mapping the full picture, but a few threads are becoming clear.
It activates 5-HT2A receptors
Psilocybin fits the same receptors serotonin uses, found on cells throughout the brain and body, not just in mood circuits.
It boosts neuroplasticity and BDNF
It stimulates the growth of new neural connections and raises BDNF, a protein that supports the survival and growth of neurons.
It lowers oxidative stress and inflammation
In aging research, it reduced markers of cellular stress and helped preserve telomeres, the protective caps on our DNA.
It supports overall cellular resilience
Together these effects point to healthier, more adaptable cells, a possible foundation for both brain health and healthy aging.
In Short
SHORT-TERM CLARITY, LONG-TERM HEALTH
Psilocybin appears to support both the here and now (better connections, mood, and focus) and the long game (extended lifespan and healthspan) in early research.
'Our findings open an exciting new chapter in psychedelic research. Psilocybin may represent a disruptive agent that promotes healthy aging.'
Dr. Louise Hecker, senior author, Emory UniversitySOURCES
- Kato K, Kleinhenz JM, Shin YJ, Coarfa C, Zarrabi AJ, Hecker L (2025). Psilocybin treatment extends cellular lifespan and improves survival of aged mice. npj Aging.
- Shao LX, Liao C, Gregg I, Davoudian PA, Savalia NK, Delagarza K, Kwan AC (2021). Psilocybin induces rapid and persistent growth of dendritic spines in frontal cortex in vivo. Neuron.
- Ly C et al. (2018). Psychedelics Promote Structural and Functional Neural Plasticity. Cell Reports.
This page describes early scientific research, much of it in cells and animals. It is not medical advice, and Earth Resonance products are a support tool for wellbeing, not a medicine. Importantly, the longevity findings used higher, repeated doses in mice, not microdosing, and have not yet been confirmed in humans. This is a promising frontier, and honesty about where the science stands is part of how we work.
CURIOUS WHERE THIS ALL BEGINS?
Explore the science behind microdosing, or see how a complete cycle works.
The ScienceSee How It Works
