Animating The Brain

13 Feb 2018, 2:24 p.m.

A robot puppet visited Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) to meet patients and families following a collaboration between GOSH Arts and puppet theatre company Theatre Rites.

The collaboration supported the development of Animating the Brain, a project that aims to ignite children’s fascination with their brain and creatively engage people with neuroscience and neurology.

During their two-week project at GOSH, the Theatre Rites creative team ran workshops on Koala Ward – the neuroscience ward – with patients and families, who were introduced to their robot puppet, ‘LabBoy’. The result of two years of research with neuroscientists from King’s College London, LabBoy was a great hit with everyone he met!

Making their own ‘brains’

Animating The Brain - Patient making their own 'brain'

In one-to-one sessions, children made their own symbolic ‘brain’ which allowed them to celebrate things that were important to them. In some cases, they playfully and physically represented the regions of their brain that caused their illness.

These workshops were made into a film, which celebrates the contributions of children and families.

Meeting staff

Animating The Brain - Patient meeting Lab Boy

Theatre Rites' creative team also met with clinical staff who work in the field of neurology. The sessions helped Theatre Rites to understand more about the expertise that staff use and the ethical and social issues that they tackle when trying to repair acquired brain injuries or manage non-typical brain developments in children.

Theatre Rites recorded their conversations with the neurology teams and, alongside the ideas gathered during workshops with families, will use them to inform the development of Animating the Brain over the next year.

Thanks to all the families and staff who took part!

Watch the film

GOSH Arts is funded by Great Ormond Street Hospital Children’s Charity.
Find out more about GOSH Arts. Follow them on Twitter and Instagram.

Kidney swap for GOSH patient who’s spent over 3,600 hours on dialysis

A five-year-old patient, who has spent almost 10% of her childhood on dialysis, has successfully had a transplant thanks to a kidney-swap scheme.

New cheek swab test helping to monitor children with rare heart condition

A cheap and simple test, being developed with funding from the British Heart Foundation (BHF), will allow quick and safe monitoring in children with arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathies (ACM).

New study finds that nasal cells protect against Covid-19 in children

New research shows that children are less likely than adults to develop severe COVID because cells in their nose are better at fighting off the virus.

New specialist gender service starts

A new specialist service for children and young people who need gender-related care and support from the NHS has opened.