UCL in the media
Doctors 3D-print 'living' body parts
Professor Martin Birchall (UCL Ear Institute) comments on the development of a new technique that 3D-prints custom-made, living body parts.
Read: BBC NewsJapanese satellite targets the x-ray universe
Professor Graziella Branduardi Raymont (UCL Space & Climate Physics) says ASTRO-H, a x-ray observatory, "is going to be spectacular".
Read: Science (£)Period pain can feel 'as bad as a heart attack'
Professor John Guillebaud (UCL Women's Health) says that period pain is not taken seriously enough by doctors.
Read: Telegraph, More: IndependentTrollope captures the essence of Englishness
Professor John Sutherland (UCL English Language & Literature) says the latest 19th-century author to be given a primetime TV makeover has much to say about the way we live now.
Read: Times (£)Virtual therapy 'helps with depression'
An immersive virtual reality therapy could help people with depression to be less critical and more compassionate towards themselves, reducing depressive symptoms, finds a study led by Professor Chris Brewin (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) and ICREA-University of Barcelona.
Read: BBC News, More: Daily Mail, Telegraph, Mirror, Washington Post, Huffington Post, Forbes, Times of India, Spectator, Listen: CBC RadioChina ramps up patent activity as Europe and the UK fall behind
Professor Sir Robin Jacob (UCL Laws) said: "The increasing number of patents coming out of China will probably result in more Chinese firms taking up litigation both inside and outside China".
Read: City AMTories looks to tame power of European courts
Professor Robert Hazell (UCL Constitution Unit) and Dr Jeff King (UCL Laws) comment on the introduction of a sovereignty act in the UK.
Read: Financial TimesHow to live well: The Life Project 70 years on
The article details how cohort studies based at UCL have provided definitive evidence that early years matter in regards to adult health.
Read: Sunday Times (£)The sinister reason people fall in love
An analysis led by Dr Kit Opie (UCL Anthropology) has suggested that monogamous male-female relationships in primates may have evolved to prevent infanticide.
Read: BBC Earth, More: BBC Earth (2)Gravitational waves
Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy) helps to check listeners' understanding of gravitational waves.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Broadcasting House' (from 7 mins 50 secs)