UCL in the media
Draft Wales Bill
Alan Trench (UCL Constitution Unit) discusses the proposed draft Wales Bill.
Listen: BBC Radio Wales 'Sunday Supplement' (from 19 mins 9 secs)Chiropractic and osteopathy - how do they work?
Professor David Colquhoun (UCL Neuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) comments on chiropractic and osteopathy saying: "In the 120 years since chiropractic and osteopathy were invented, there is no convincing evidence that either works".
Read: GuardianLandmark Huntington's trial starts
A clinical study, led by Professor Sarah Tabrizi (UCL Neurodegenerative Diseases), has trialled the first drug that can potentially correct the underlying defect that causes Huntington's disease.
Read: BBC News, More: Times (£), UCL NewsBiographers must give us warts and all
In an op-ed piece, Professor John Sutherland (UCL English Language & Literature) says that "to understand the poet, we must understand the man".
Read: Times (£)Why we can't work out where everything is in the universe
Dr Andrew Pontzen (UCL Physics & Astronomy) explains why our tried and tested way of calculating cosmic distance is struggling to keep up with the latest generation of galaxy surveys.
Read: New Scientist (£)European job markets and migration
Professor Christian Dustmann (UCL CReAM) discusses the integration of migrants into European job markets.
Watch: Deutsche WelleBill of Rights
Professor Robert Hazell (UCL Constitution Unit) discusses whether a new bill of rights would mean the UK withdraws from the European Convention on Human Rights.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'World at One' (from 39 mins 56 secs)Cinema-going of the 1960s
Professor Melvyn Stokes (UCL History) discusses the Cultural Memory and British Cinema-Going of the 1960s project, which aims to shed light on the social and cultural history of cinema.
Listen: BBC Radio Derby 'Andy Potter' (from 2 hours 17 mins)Students awarded £100,000 over rat-infested housing
A group complaint submitted by students living in Campbell House West alleging unacceptable living conditions during the 2014-2015 academic year has been upheld by the UCL Complaints Panel.
Read: Guardian, More: THE, Huffington Post, UCL NewsSex and the single worm
A study involving Dr Arantza Barrios and Dr Richard Poole (UCL Cell & Developmental Biology) has found a pair of neurons in the brain of male nematode worms that allow them to remember and seek sex even at the expense of food.
Read: Guardian, More: Daily Mail, Telegraph, Independent, Metro, Huffington Post, Washington Post, Times of India, Nature, Listen: Nature podcast