DiPT (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "DiPT" in English language version.

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azleg.gov (Global: low place; English: 8,863rd place)

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  • Shulgin AT (1976). "Psychotomimetic Agents". Psychopharmacological Agents. Elsevier. pp. 59–146. doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-290559-9.50011-9. ISBN 978-0-12-290559-9. Retrieved 9 November 2025. [5-MeO-DMT] has been shown to be a centrally active drug in animal studies (Gessner and Page, 1962; Gallagher et al., 1964) and to be active parenterally in man. Like [DMT], it is not active orally, although the N,N-diisopropyl homolog [(DiPT)], as with the hindered dialkyl tryptamines mentioned earlier, is effective by the oral route (A. T. Shulgin, unpublished data, 1974). [...] With this in mind, three comments should be made. It is "knowledge" within the anonymous underground drug publications that not only is the [DPT] homolog mentioned above active orally but also that the diisopropyl counterpart [(DiPT)] is especially so.

erowid.org (Global: 3,887th place; English: 3,197th place)

  • Shulgin A (1997). "#4. DiPT". TiHKAL: Tryptamines I Have Known and Loved. Berkeley, CA USA: Transform Press. pp. 403–406. ISBN 978-0-9630096-9-2.

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  • US 20240277665A1, Daley PF, Cozzi NV, Callaway WB, "Asymmetric allyl tryptamines", issued 4 March 2024, assigned to Alexander Shulgin Research Institute Inc. 

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  • Corey V, Halpern JH, Passie T (2012). "Psychoactive Substances". Hallucinations. New York, NY: Springer New York. pp. 297–316. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-0959-5_22. ISBN 978-1-4614-0958-8. Retrieved 9 November 2025. 22.2.3.2 DiPT A member of the tryptamine chemical family, diisopropyltryptamine (DiPT) is a fascinating substance because, unlike most hallucinogens, its effects are predominantly auditory. It is also possibly less sensitive than other hallucinogens to the mindset of the user, the setting in which it is ingested, and other psychological considerations, perhaps because the auditory system has become less salient to the human organism as we have evolved into a vision-based species. In general, auditory pitch is perceived as lower than normal, and harmonious sounds lose their resonance with one another. This dissonance is even perceived by people with perfect pitch, which has some implications about where in the processing stream DiPT's effects occur. Voices are also altered and disharmonious with one another (Shulgin and Shulgin 1997 ) . DiPT has few other known effects; it would seem to call for further investigation from those interested in the neurology of sound, music, and verbal language processing. For example, it would be fascinating to know the effects of this substance on perceptions of tonal languages such as Chinese, Huichol, or Dogon; would it alter the words perceived as being spoken?

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