Sara Kristiansen
Clinical psychologist at the University of Copenhagen’s psychedelic research clinic (NOESIS)
Data updated
Research Footprint
Sara Kristiansen appears in 5 tracked papers (2019–2021), most studied alongside Psilocybin, across Neuroimaging & Brain Measures, Healthy Volunteers and Depressive Disorders.
Most-cited paper: Psychedelic effects of psilocybin correlate with serotonin 2A receptor occupancy and plasma psilocin levels (491 citations).
Frequent co-authors: Gitte Knudsen, Patrick Fisher and Dea Stenbæk.
Background & Research
Sara Kristiansen is a Danish clinical psychologist and researcher associated with the University of Copenhagen and Rigshospitalet’s neurobiology/psychedelic research ecosystem. Her published work centers on psilocybin in healthy humans, especially how serotonin 2A receptor biology relates to acute subjective effects and longer-term psychological changes. She has also been publicly described as a clinical psychologist at the University of Copenhagen’s psychedelic research clinic (NOESIS).
Key Impact
She coauthored several influential human psilocybin PET and neuroimaging studies linking 5-HT2A receptor binding, subjective psychedelic effects, mindfulness, and resting-state connectivity.
Collaboration Network
12 collaborators· click a node to visit their profile
Full network →Compounds
Topics
Top Collaborators
Affiliations
Institutions, companies, and organisations Sara Kristiansen is associated with.