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British Science Association

Countdown is on to British Science Festival in Southampton Insight into action – exploring the Public Attitudes to Science Survey Celebrating British Science Week 6-15 March 2026 British Science Association selected as the future host of EDIS APPG on Diversity & Inclusion in STEM launches new project on AI equity Smashing Stereotypes is back for British Science Week 2026 Guest blog: Community Led Research Pilot, funder’s reflections Public Attitudes to Science Survey shows the public values science, but highlights concerns over AI, quality of information, and representation Sir Roland Jackson Putting communities in the driving seat: report explores impact of participatory research Dr Alex Lathbridge and Karen Blake MBE named British Science Association Honorary Fellows 2025: Our past year, wrapped A-Level student builds highly-accurate budget Sign-Language-to-speech wrist technology A cautious welcome for key recommendations in Curriculum and Assessment Review Confidence and support to teach science has fallen, primary education report suggests 'It’s through change that science progresses’: Disabled staff in science and medicine lead action for equity Reflections on the British Science Festival in Liverpool Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge's presidential address Report highlights disconnect between data collection and action on EDI in UK science and tech sector CREST website upgraded to transform STEM learning and empower educators across the UK Robo-chemists, eye-trackers and a VR fishing boat: the last day of the British Science Festival 2025 Phages, geophonics and prosthetics: the fourth day of British Science Festival 2025 Whale song, urban farming and science comedy: the third day of the British Science Festival 2025 Climate solutions, pioneering women and particle detectors: the second day of the British Science Festival 2025 Chatbots, ghost particles and neurodiversity: the first day of the British Science Festival 2025 Supporting inclusive entrepreneurship and innovation among and through micro, small and medium sized enterprises (M-SMEs) CREST Awards now free for all young people in Scotland The power of plants: eight events to dig into at this year’s British Science Festival Five health and humanity highlights from this year’s British Science Festival Exploring the wonders of space: five unmissable British Science Festival events ‘Early and meaningful’ public involvement in shaping engineering biology research and policy vital What's it like to work at the British Science Festival as an Evaluations Assistant? Blackpool school pupil launches pop-up science museum and fundraiser in campaign against ‘science deserts’ British Science Festival in Liverpool programme launches Education | Keeping STEM learning going at home From Awareness to Action: Creating Authentic Neurodiversity Support in STEM Workplaces Baroness Brown appointed 2025-26 President of the British Science Association Education | Our Engage Teacher Conference 2025 round-up British Science Association Trustee awarded MBE Introducing our new Head of Marketing and Communications Navigating eco-anxiety in the face of the climate change crisis Education| Ten top tips for adapting resources for SEND learners Education| Adapting resources for SEND learners Announcing our British Science Festival 2025 Section Presidents British Science Festival 2025 Award Lecturers announced Education | British Science Week, CREST and going cross-curricular! 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UKRI, Ipsos, and the BSA announce launch of 2025 public attitudes to science survey British Science Association’s lead strategic partner UKRI welcomes new CEO The Ideas Fund awards £1.73m to community wellbeing projects For Thought | Science, innovation, and society: working together for long-term change Change and adapt for the better with the British Science Week 2025 activity packs! 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British Science Festival: Hunting for a Huntington’s treatment
2018-09-13 · via British Science Association

Written by Alan Barker, Freelance Writer, British Science Festival 

Dr Emma Yhnell is looking for ways to build brain resilience in people living with Huntington’s using computer games. She explained more in the Charles Darwin Award Lecture at this year’s British Science Festival. Alan Barker tore himself away from his smartphone and listened in.

In some parts of the academic establishment, you’re likely to hear two major prohibitions about science presentations. One: never present until you’ve got results. And two: never, ever use props.

Emma Yhnell of Cardiff University cheerfully ignores both diktats. In the Charles Darwin Award Lecture at this year’s British Science Festival, she told us that her feasibility study is incomplete – so she can’t even look at the interim results, let alone discuss them. And, to help her explain some fundamentals of genetics, she happily strung a collection of jeans on a washing line across the stage. She even extended the denim theme to the pre-show music: Woody Guthrie serenaded us as we took our seats. Guthrie died in 1967 of complications from Huntington’s disease, so his music guided us neatly towards Emma’s main theme: how to help people living with Huntington’s.

At its heart, then, this was a lecture about research methods. But it didn’t feel like it. True, she flashed up a flowchart at one point; but at every stage, Emma related her material to her audience’s interests and values.

Emma made a jean-ius use of onstage props (Picture: Twitter/Emma Yhnell)

She began by challenging us directly to consider what makes us who we are. That took us to genes and jeans: the denim took on the illustrative role of explaining the structure of DNA, vital information in the understanding of Huntington’s and how it develops.

 (Little-known fact: each of your cells contains about two metres of DNA. With 50 trillion cells in the average human body, we each contain enough DNA to stretch to the Sun and back 300 times. Think about it.)

Huntington’s is cruel. It’s caused by a gene that expands unusually to twice or three times its normal length. The gene codes for a protein that does extensive damage to the nervous system. (“If there’s one thing I want you to remember,” Emma told us, “it’s that genes make proteins.”) If you carry this expanded gene, the risk of developing Huntington’s is 100%.

One in 1,200 people are affected, making it challenging to carry out studies of any size. The disease produces physical symptoms – uncontrollable movement and shaking – but it also affects cognitive function, often before the physical symptoms set in. A great deal of research is seeking ways to intervene at the physical and genetic level; Emma wants to find ways of increasing cognitive resilience, and her tool of choice is brain training.

After demonstrating how brain training works using the Stroop test (try it for yourself), she demonstrated a couple of elements of the games she’s using. But perhaps the most interesting part of her talk was her discussion of the ethical dimensions of her research.

Look familiar? The Stroop test is widely used for brain training (Picture: Khayne, Wikimedia Commons)

To begin with, will brain training work? Does improving your skill at a game on an iPad improve your skills in real life? Would it be helpful to customise the training for people with different digital abilities, or at different stages of the disease?

Then there are issues surrounding the research process. Emma explained randomisation, subtly smuggling in a key feature of any social study: she’s forbidden from deciding who does the training and who goes into the control group, and she’s very pleased that she’s not forced to decide. But how do participants react when they’re asked to take part but don’t do brain training that might improve their quality of life? What’s the effect of bringing participants to a clinic? Is it better to work with people in their homes? How does the study affect participants’ friends, families and carers – and can those people themselves make a useful contribution to the work?

We emerged from Emma’s account with a rich sense of the complexity of a clinical study. She’s not just measuring how training can affect a brain struggling with disease; she’s reflecting on the thoughts and feelings of the people she’s studying, and the people who care for the people she’s studying. And her absorbing lecture reminded us that good scientists never lose sight of their work’s ultimate aim: not merely to understand the effects of an intervention, but to improve people’s lives.

Find out more about the British Science Festival here