Hubbub were the first main residents in The Hub, between October 2014 and July 2016.
Goals
Hubbub investigated rest and its ‘opposites’ during their time in The Hub.
They also looked at the health implications for modern lives that are increasingly lived in a hubbub of activity.
The group’s core team included a social scientist, a poet, a psychologist and a broadcaster.
Research outputs
Hubbub’s work included a survey called the Rest Test. Launched through BBC Radio 4 and the BBC World Service, it’s credited as being the largest-ever survey about rest. More than 18,000 people from 134 countries took part.
The group also staged ‘Rest and its Discontents’, an exhibition and series of events at the Mile End Pavilion in East London. Exhibits included audio recordings, film and interactive installations.
Publications included ‘The Restless Compendium’, an open-access book of essays on rest, restlessness, silence and noise. Contributors included psychologists, activists and historians. The team also published ‘Rethinking Interdisciplinarity across the Social Sciences and Neurosciences’, a reflection on the complexities of collaborative working.
10 years after the conclusion of their project, the Rest Test continues to produce new research findings.
