UCL in the media
Cosmology is in crisis - but not for the reason you may think
Dr Tom Kitching (UCL Space & Climate Physics) argues that confirmation bias, the psychological effect that makes people unconsciously interpret information to confirm their beliefs, is a big threat to cosmology.
Read: The ConversationDutch lead European push to flip journals to open access
Dr Paul Ayris (UCL Library Services) says steps taken by the Association of Universities in the Netherlands are "great step forward to an Open Access world".
Read: NatureHello, my (imaginary) friend
Dr Karen Majors (UCL Institute of Education) says that imaginary friends are a good way for children to process what's going on around them.
Read: Globe and MailReinventing Russia
Dr Sarah Young, Dr Sergei Bogatyrev and Professor Simon Dixon (all UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies) look at the beginning of the Romanovs' reign in Russia, from Mikhail to Peter the Great.
Watch: BBC Four 'Empire of the Tsars: Romanov Russia with Lucy Worsley'Who, What, Why: How do elements get their names?
Following the addition of four new elements to the periodic table, Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) explains how they get their names.
Read: BBC NewsAre blue skies back for Canada's scientists?
Professor Rob Brownstone (UCL Institute of Neurology) discusses the reasons behind his decision to resign as director of research in neurosurgery at Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia and to take up his new post as chair of neurosurgery at UCL.
Read: THE (£)Scholarly book reviewing: time for a plot twist
In an op-ed piece, Dr Lars Fischer (UCL History) argues "that we need to wake up and defend the vital practice of scholarly book reviewing, not sleepwalk to an unhappy ending".
Read: THE (£)A lasting legacy to the First World War
The First World War Centenary Battlefields Tour, a free school programme run by the UCL Institute of Education, continues this year, with thousands of students having already taken part.
Read: SecEdSingle-sex education: row erupts after head criticises girls' schools
A 2006 study by Professor Alice Sullivan (UCL Institute of Education) found that single-sex schools did little to inhibit relationships between the sexes.
Read: TelegraphFrom bosons to Bigfoot: six science mysteries that might be solved in 2016
Dr Gavin Hesketh (UCL Physics & Astronomy) speculates on which of science's biggest questions could be answered in the coming months.
Read: The Conversation