UCL in the media
Moody people may be the most adaptable
A study led by Dr Eran Eldar (UCL Imaging Neuroscience) has found that moody individuals may be exhibiting a natural ability to adapt to changes in our environment.
Read: Telegraph, More: Daily Mail, Huffington Post, Times of India, UCL NewsSafeguarding Holocaust studies
Ruth-Anne Lenga (UCL Institute of Education) discusses the findings of the UCL Centre for Holocaust's recent national study on what young people know, understand and think about the Holocaust.
Read: Jewish NewsRefugees helping refugees: how a Palestinian camp in Lebanon is welcoming Syrians
Dr Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh (UCL Geography) examines the lives of Syrian refugees living in Lebanon's Baddawi camp, which has been home to displaced Palestinian refugees since 1955.
Read: The ConversationA tax reform to keep seniors on the job
Research by Professor Eric French (UCL Economics) has found that near-retirees' work decisions are particularly sensitive to tax rates.
Read: Wall Street JournalFootballers have 'worryingly poor' teeth
A study led by Professor Ian Needleman (UCL Eastman Dental Institute) has found that professional footballers have worryingly poor teeth that could be affecting their performance on the pitch.
Read: BBC News, More: Telegraph, Times (£), Sun, Scotsman, The Week, Listen: BBC Radio 5 live '5 live Breakfast', More: BBC Radio Tees 'Mike Parr' (from 2 hours 9 secs), BBC Radio Surrey 'Danny Pike' (from 2 hours 15 secs), BBC Radio Stoke 'Perry Spiller' (from 1 hour 24 mins), BBC Radio Wales 'Jason Mohammad' (from 1 hour 40 mins), BBC Radio Scotland 'John Beattie' (from 53 mins 45 secs)Why emotion makes the tills ring
Dr Dimitrios Tsivrikos (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) comments on the reasons why Christmas adverts from companies often try to make us laugh or cry, rather than sell products.
Read: TelegraphIoE centre's agenda aims to make case for higher education research
The Centre for Global Higher Education has released details of its five-year research programme which aims to demonstrate that the study of higher education should be taken as seriously as other areas of the social sciences.
Read: THEAmbivalent atheism
Dr Lois Lee (UCL Institute of Advanced Studies) discusses her research into non-religious people, specifically those who consider themselves ambivalent atheists.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Thinking Allowed' (from 15 mins 4 secs)Language evolution: a gene for language?
Dr Frederique Liegeois (UCL Institute of Child Health) discusses the genetic basis of language.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Word of Mouth' (from 1 min 25 secs)Pregl's analysis tubes
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) examines the small matter of microanalysis.
Read: Chemistry World