UCL in the media
Discussion on monochrome art
Sarah Pickering (UCL Slade School of Fine Art) discusses monochrome art on the advent of a new exhibition at the National Gallery in London: 'Monochrome: Painting in Black and White', which opened two days ago.
Listen: BBC Radio 3 'Free Thinking'What young Britons really think about Brexit and their prospects outside the EU
Dr Avril Keating (UCL Institute of Education) writes about the difficulty of categorising the views of young people in the UK on Brexit.
Read: The ConversationParis agreement pledges only third of action needed to avoid worst effects of climate change, major UN report finds
Professor Chris Rapley (UCL Earth Sciences) says findings from the UN's Emissions Gap report should encourage politicians to do more to fight climate change.
Read: Evening StandardHow cats and dogs are helping doctors predict dementia in people with Parkinson's
Dr Rimona Weil (UCL Molecular Neuroscience) comments on her research which developed a way of determining will who will develop dementia at a later stage.
Is this the interactive road of the future?
UCL research has been involved in the development of a prototype for a 'responsive road', intended to reduce collisions between cars and pedestrians at road crossings.
Read: Daily MailHow WhatsApp conquered Westminster - and other workplaces
Dr Steven Murdoch (UCL Computer Science) comments on the use of Whatsapp in work contexts, and whether employers can track what their employees are saying.
Read: New StatesmanStop using mental illness to explain away violence. It's not that simple
A study published by Dr Emily Corner and Dr Paul Gill (UCL Security & Crime Science) shows that the link between mental health illnesses and violence is still unclear.
Read: Globe and MailHalf of the universe's ''missing matter'' is finally found: Elusive particles are link pairs of galaxies through filaments of hot gas
Professor Richard Ellis (UCL Physics & Astronomy) comments on newly found 'missing' half of the universe's observable matter.
Read: Mail Online, More: Times, GuardianUK state should pay for housing, food, transport and internet, says report
Professor Henrietta Moore (UCL Institute for Global Prosperity) has led a study outlining how Universal Basic Services more in line with NHS principles could be delivered.
Read: Guardian, More: Independent, Huffington Post, Mail OnlineCash incentives for GPs do not make care better
Dr Rishi Mandavia (UCL Ear Institute), Dr Nishchay Mehta (UCL Institute of Health Informatics) and Professor Anne Schilder (UCL Ear Institute) co-author a paper showing that a financial incentive programme for GPs may not improve quality of care.
Read: Times (£), More: Sun