UCL in the media
Are you as fit as you should be for your age?
Dr Mark Hamer (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health) says men and women who are active could be at risk of over-use injuries during their thirties.
Read: Daily MailHow Western plans to fight Putin's propaganda war could backfire
Dr Joanna Szostek (UCL SSEES) explains why Russian readers are unlikely to believe a narrative that is paid for by Western governments.
Read: The ConversationAusterity and house building boom mean British archaeology is in severe danger
Lorna Richardson (UCL Centre for Digital Humanities) explains that although archaeology is protected as part of the planning process, the huge wave of planned house building means this is at risk.
Read: The ConversationExplainer: how does an experiment at the Large Hadron Collider work?
Dr Gavin Hesketh (UCL Physics & Astronomy) gives a timeline account of the Large Hadron Collider restart.
Read: The ConversationHobbit first edition with JRR Tolkien's inscription doubles sales record
Professor Susan Irvine (UCL English Language & Literature) translates an Old English inscription by JRR Tolkien in a first edition copy of the Hobbit.
Read: GuardianE-cigarettes: The debate gets cloudier
Professor Robert West (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health) says that the Welsh government has been misled by the "barrage of anti e-cigarette propaganda coming from public health activists with little knowledge or understanding of the evidence".
Read: BBC NewsBlood test for Down's syndrome may save babies
A new study, led by Professor Lyn Chitty (UCL Institute of Child Health), has shown that non-invasive prenatal testing for Down's syndrome is effective as an amniocentesis.
Read: Telegraph, More: Independent, Times (£)How 1970s deodorant is still doing harm
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) explains the risks of fluorine, describing it as the "tyrannosaurus rex of the periodic table".
Read: BBC NewsSchool experiment debunks Gwyneth's manuka honey myths
Lab_13, a project which Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) helped establish and is designed to help introduce scientific thinking to the classroom at a younger age, has conducted the country's first proper randomised controlled trial of manuka honey.
Read: Times (£)Humanity won when men found their feminine side
Commenting on a paper on the "feminisation" of early man, Professor Mark Maslin (UCL Geography) said it "offered a convincing explanation of mankind's sudden cultural growth spurt".
Read: Times (£), The Conversation