UCL in the media
Losing One Million Scientists, Germany Turns to Migrants
Professor Christian Dustmann (UCL Economics) comments on the importance of immigration for companies in Germany.
Read: BloombergWindows bug-testing software cracks stem cell programs
Professor Chris mason (UCL Biochemical Engineering) comments on the news that software used to keep bugs out of Microsoft Windows programs could be used to shed light on how stem cells decide what type of tissue to become.
Read: New ScientistDo 'hard' sciences hold the solution to the replication crisis in psychology?
Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy) and Dr Helen Czerski (UCL Mechanical Engineering) comment on the current replication drive in psychology.
Read: GuardianCan film scripts help people understand anxiety?
Dr Vyv Huddy (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) explains how the film Solaris by Andrei Tarkovsky can help us understand anxiety as a clinical condition.
Read: Guardian3D imaging and robotics device could transform surgery inside the womb
Professor Sebastien Ourselin and Dr Tom Vercauteren (UCL Medical Physics & Bioengineering) discuss the development of an extended flexible roboticised arm and an innovative endoscopic imaging device to help perform surgery on foetuses while still in the womb.
Read: The ConversationThe questions politicians aren't asking publicly
With the NHS under increasing financial pressure, Michael Jacobs (UCL Political Science) asks whether politicians are willing to look at the question of raising taxes for the NHS.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'The World This Weekend' (from 19 mins 39 secs)The trouble with miracles
Professor Julio Davila (UCL Development Planning Unit) comments on the transformation of Medellín, Colombia and outlines some of the steps it will need to take to ensure continuing success.
Read: EconomistHow faith healers cash in with 'dark age' remedies
Professor Michael Baum (UCL Research Department of General Surgery) says that treatments from faith healers are "based on concepts that go back to the Dark Ages and have no place in the 21st Century".
Read: Daily MailNitrogen: The bringer of life and death
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) explains the explosive nature of nitrogen.
Read: BBC NewsSat-navs dull the mind: Brain is less active when we blindly follow directions
Work led by Dr Hugo Spiers (UCL Behavioural Neuroscience) finds that how we navigate from A to B is controlled by two brain regions which track the distance to our destination.
Read: Daily Mail, More: NPR, Daily Mail (2), Wellcome Trust