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22 October 2025

North Wales Scientist Launches Behavioural Science Maze


Denise Hampson

A North Wales behavioural scientist has unveiled a new exhibition she believes could revolutionise how businesses and public services influence people.

Denise Hampson, author of a book called The Desire Code, has launched an interactive and immersive showcase designed to help clients spark fresh ideas and engagement.

Ms Hampson, a former Team GB cyclist who qualified as a systems engineer before moving into behavioural science, said the exhibition brings her Desire Code philosophy to life in a way that is “engaging, accessible and immediately useful.”

She explained:

“This isn’t about abstract theory – it’s about creating a modern-day ideas box. We can immerse people in scenarios that reflect their sector and generate real, actionable concepts they can take away and put to work straightaway.”

After a successful trial in Llandudno, health providers, housing associations and community groups are among those already showing interest in the platform, which blends psychology, storytelling and interactive technology to spark imagination and drive positive change.

Ms Hampson, who lives in Old Colwyn, studied systems engineering at Loughborough University where her degree was sponsored by British Aerospace.

She says the degree which focused on human factors engineering – understanding how people interact with complex systems – was the “foundation for everything I do now”.

Alongside her studies, she rose through the ranks of British cycling. From 2001 to 2004 she was part of the national squad full time, becoming British Women’s Sprint Champion and setting a national 200 metre record in 2002.

After retiring from competition, she returned to North Wales and worked with Conwy Council’s leisure team, and then the Public Health Service in Wales. It was, she said, the turning point that drew her toward behavioural science.

“We were throwing numbers at people – five-a-day, 10,000 steps, alcohol units – but you don’t win hearts and minds with a blizzard of statistics,” she said.

 

“I remember standing outside Asda in Kinmel Bay trying to talk to people about fruit and veg. They already knew it all, but they weren’t engaged. That’s when I realised we needed to design things differently.”

That insight led her to focus on how people make real-world decisions.

“It’s not about telling people what to do,” she said. “It’s about helping them make the best choices for themselves – and giving them information in a way that resonates.”

Her approach has since been used across health, justice, sport and industry. One project in Glasgow to help people stop smoking beat its target by 150 per cent and was later used by NHS Scotland as an example of best practice.

“It wasn’t one thing that made a difference – it was probably eight,” she said. “We probably tried 20. You throw lots of small things at a challenge and see what sticks. Simplicity and user-centred design are crucial – involve the people who’ll actually use it and you’ll get better results.”

The installation allows up to 30 participants at any one time to explore a walk-through maze at two-minute intervals.

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