UCL in the media
Pills, thrills and polymer gels: what's the future for male contraception?
Professor John Guillebaud (UCL Institute for Women's Health) on the barriers to development of a male contraceptive pill.
Read: The GuardianPeeking into the brain's filing system
Research led by Dr Aidan Horner and Professor Neil Burgess (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) provides the first firm evidence for "pattern completion" in the human hippocampus.
Read: BBC News, More: UCL NewsMore action needed to meet climate targets
A report by researchers from UCL, including Mr Steve Pye and Professor Neil Strachan (UCL Energy Institute), finds that stronger action is required to transform the UK's energy system and reduce carbon emissions in line with 2050 targets.
Read: The Engineer, More: UCL NewsStudent architects' annual shows: the shape of things to come?
UCL Bartlett School of Architecture's yearly exhibition offers flights of fancy, sci-fi visions and things of beauty from those destined to shape our built environment.
Read: GuardianHas physics cried wolf too often, or do false alarms help build understanding?
Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy) argues that while mistakes are embarrassing, these things happen - and the answer to building public confidence in science is not to pretend that they don't.
Read: GuardianParallels in ancient literature to the current Greek crisis
Dr Rosa Andújar (UCL Greek and Latin) discusses similarities between ancient stories from Athens in the 6th Century BC and today's Greek debt crisis.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 (from 12 mins)How robots are preserving our old newspapers
Professor Melissa Terras (UCL Information Studies) and Dr Tim Weyrich (UCL Computer Science) explain how computational imaging can be used to read and preserve copies of fragile or damaged documents.
Read: GuardianCitizen science app to track poaching and logging
A new mobile app called Sapelli, designed by UCL researchers, is being used by indigenous people to take action to protect their local environment and way of life against poaching and logging.
Watch: BBC 'Click' (from 13 minutes 30 seconds)Bringing conferences to life with new technology
Technology is revolutionising conferences to make the experience more interactive. Dr Beau Lotto (UCL Brain Sciences) says there is a psychological reason for conference organisers spending on technology as it boosts experiences, which engages the brain more, making the value last longer.
Watch: BBC 'Click' (from 10 minutes)How common drugs affect empathy and risk taking
Healthy people given the serotonin-enhancing antidepressant citalopram were willing to pay almost twice as much to prevent harm to themselves or others than those given placebo drugs in a moral decision-making experiment led by Dr Molly Crockett (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience).
Read: Wired, More: Daily Mail, UCL News