UCL in the media
Climate scientist Arthur Petersen answers your questions
Ahead of the Paris climate talks, Professor Arthur Petersen (UCL STEaPP) answers listeners' questions on climate change.
Listen: BBC World Service 'Newshour'A room of one's own in academia? No, more like a desk in a call centre
In an op-ed piece, Professor Jonathan Wolff (UCL Philosophy) looks at the effect open-planning working can have on academics.
Read: GuardianHow coffee could give you mouth ulcers
Professor Stephen Porter (UCL Eastman Dental Institute) explains how mouth ulcers can be a sign that "something in the body is not working as well as it should".
Read: Daily MailSeventy years after Nuremberg, global justice is still a work in progress
In an opinion piece, Professor Philippe Sands (UCL Laws) examines the legacy of the Nuremberg trials.
Read: GuardianNumbers by nature
Professor Brian Butterworth (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) explains the number senses of guppies.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Numbers by Nature' (from 1 min 44 secs)Universities told to stop recruiting PE teacher trainees
Katharine Vincent (UCL Institute of Education) comments on the announcement that universities have already been told to stop recruiting trainee PE teachers for next year after reaching a newly-imposed cap level after just one month.
Read: Schools WeekAdults prove they're better at multitasking than teenagers
Research led by Kathryn Mills (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) has found that adults perform better at memory tasks while being distracted by social interactions than teenagers.
Read: Daily Express, More: Daily Mail, Telegraph, Shropshire StarEmma
Professor John Mullan (UCL English Language & Literature) discusses Jane Austen's novel Emma.
What is David Cameron's speechwriter banging on about now?
Dr Steven Murdoch (UCL Computer Science) comments on claims by Clare Foges that tech companies are using cryptography to defend against governments.
Alzheimer's introduced to Colombian town by Spanish conquistador
Dr Rita Guerreiro (UCL Molecular Neuroscience) says it is "very unlikely" that a genetic mutation for early onset Alzheimer's disease found in people from a town in Colombia was introduced by a Spanish conquistador early in the 17th century.
Read: New Scientist (£), More: Washington Post