UCL in the media
Squeezed Britons try their hands at microbusinesses
Leo Rios (UCL Biochemical Engineering) set up a shrimp farming business with two other UCL graduates and financial support from the university.
Read: GuardianExhibition of the week
Dulwich Picture Gallery is exhibiting a collection of work by artists from the UCL Slade School of Art. It runs until 22 September and will show the impact of the First World War on their work.
Read: IndependentCommitment beats will
A new study by Molly Crockett (Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at UCL) shows that avoiding temptation is more successful than attempting to resist it.
Read: Nature'Starcraft' gameplay boosts mental flexibility
Certain video games can help the brain to become more agile and improve strategic thinking, according to a study led by Professor Brad Love (UCL Cognitive, Perceptual & Brain Sciences).
Read: WSJ (£) More: UCL News Huffington Post CNET Psychology Today Fox Newsroom America PCR Online WBOC16 BetaBeat HNGN Maximum PC Yahoo News Value Walk Health.com TGDailyTomorrow's cities: Do you want to live in a smart city?
Getting citizens involved in the process of improving cities is crucial, thinks Andrew Hudson-Smith, director of the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis at UCL.
Read: BBC NewsControversial student digs approved
One critic described 465 Caledonian Road as 'cheap and aesthetically bankrupt'.
Read: Express More: CNJMetaphorically literal
Professor John Sutherland (UCL English) said, "George Orwell was right: if you want to destroy democracy, impoverish the language."
BBC Radio 4's The World Tonight (from 40m 27s)The gallery which lives on in time and space
The Science Museum is transforming its largest exhibition space into a new gallery dedicated to the information technology revolution.
Read & Watch: BBC NewsNuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) describes one of the tools of his trade - a nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer - MNR.
Listen: Inside Science: BBC Radio 4 (from 24mins)'Spider style' blood vessel building
Dr Suwan Jayasinghe (UCL Department of Mechanical Engineering) said, "Like a spider weaves its web we are able to draw out this continuous fibre of polymer and cells and weave a web."
Read: BBC News