Bodystorming

From HandWiki

Bodystorming is a technique sometimes used in interaction design or as a creativity technique. It has also been cited as catalyzing scientific research when used as a modeling tool.[1] The idea is to imagine what it would be like if the product existed, and act as though it exists, ideally in the place it would be used. It is going through an idea with improvised artifacts and physical activities to envision a solution. This User Experience Design (UXD) technique is ideal to design physical spaces (e.g. the interior design of a shop) but can also be used to design physical products or software.

Use in Scientific Research

American dance company Black Label Movement's artistic director Carl Flink created a bodystorming system with University of Minnesota biomedical engineer David Odde in 2009 as a part of their Moving Cell Project.[2] funded by the university's Institute for Advanced Study. The system initially brought dance artists and scientists together, including Dance Your PhD founder John Bohannon who first applied the term "bodystorming" to this method,[3] in order to rapid prototype research hypotheses in biomedical engineering using choreographic rules for participants to follow. As a technique for scientists and dancers to model scientific theories,[4] it has been credited with catalyzing scientific research[1][5] and gives the participants the “psychological sense of what it would be like to be a molecule".[6][7] Bodystorming sessions have been held at the 2018 Neuro-Oncology Symposium as well as the PSON Annual Investegators Meeting (2019) allowing scientists to use the Bodystorming system to model their current research. It also “offers new opportunities to learn, teach, and drive new discoveries across disciplinary boundaries.”[8] Subsequently, research scientists have found the method not only “builds awareness of science”[9] but understands that the body is “not just a site of knowledge but also a medium of communication.”[10] A typical bodystorming session poses scientific questions then “provides visual information on why a model works or fails and streamlines the process of selecting a successful model.”[11]

Opinions on this method

The proponents of this idea like to point out the fact that you get up and move, trying things out with your own body, rather than just sitting around a table and discussing it while having to imagine it in the abstract (as in the case of brainstorming). It is a proper user-centered design method, since it can be carried out by the designers as well as the users of the final product.

References

Specific

  1. 1.0 1.1 Powers, J D; Castle, B T; Odde, D J (November 2015). "The predicted role of steric specificity in crowding-mediated effects on reversible biomolecular association". Physical Biology 12 (6): 066004. doi:10.1088/1478-3975/12/6/066004. ISSN 1478-3975. PMID 26595211. Bibcode2015PhBio..12f6004P. 
  2. Flink, Carl; Odde, David (September 29, 2012). HIT + THE MOVING CELL PROJECT. Twin Cities Public Television (TPT / PBS).
  3. Bohannon, John (November 28, 2012). Dance vs. PowerPoint, a modest proposal. TED-Ed. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21.
  4. Shapiro, Linda (January 1, 2014). "Flying Through Space". Dance Magazine. https://www.dancemagazine.com/flying-through-space-2306923645.html. 
  5. Odde, David (May 29, 2013). If truth is beauty, can art be science?. TEDMED. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21.
  6. "UCSF Profiles: Dyche Mullins". University of California, San Francisco. https://profiles.ucsf.edu/dyche.mullins. 
  7. Fields, Helen (November 12, 2012), "Bodystorming: Dance Grooves Show How Molecules Move", Science, https://www.science.org/content/article/bodystorming-dance-grooves-show-how-molecules-move 
  8. Flink, Carl; Odde, David J. (December 2012). "Science+dance=bodystorming". Trends in Cell Biology 22 (12): 613–616. doi:10.1016/j.tcb.2012.10.005. ISSN 0962-8924. PMID 23122551. 
  9. "When hip-hop meets endoplasmic reticulum". Nature India. 2015. doi:10.1038/nindia.2015.52. ISSN 1755-3180. 
  10. Bengaluru, Nikitha (March 12, 2015). "A dance that bridges gap between science, art". Deccan Herald. Archived from the original on 2015-07-09. https://web.archive.org/web/20150709020054/https://www.deccanherald.com/content/465212/a-dance-bridges-gap-science.html. 
  11. Srivastava, Vanita (April 29, 2015). "When belly dance meets genetic mutations". Hindustan Times. https://www.hindustantimes.com/art-and-culture/when-belly-dance-meets-genetic-mutations/story-yQN0KQvqQ5mt3bv5jdnXfP.html.