UCL in the media
Investigating Historic Abuse
Dr Jonathan Rogers (UCL Laws) comments on the complex issues surrounding getting justice in historic abuse cases.
Listen: BBC Radio 4's The Report (from 20 mins) More: BBC NewsNanocrystal Filmed At 1 Billion Frames Per Second
Dr Jesse Clarke (UCL London Centre for Nanotechnology) comments on how he helped film a nanometer-sized gold crystal at a billion frames per second.
Read: Discovery News More: The EngineerJust been dumped? Learn how to get over it
Dr Petra Boynton (UCL Medical School) outlines how to get over the shock and distress that comes from rejection.
Read: TelegraphApplying to City Law Firms
If spotless GCSE and A-level results are also required, then it's no surprise that firms focus on the premier league universities - Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol, Durham, Manchester, Nottingham, Warwick and the London trio of King's College, University College and the London School of Economics.
Read: Times (£)Alternative therapies for dementia patients
Dr Aimee Spector (UCL Psychology) explains how Cognitive Stimulation Therapy can help people with dementia.
Listen: BBC Radio York's Breakfast Show (from 1 hour, 24 mins)Open-plan offices make employees 'less productive, less happy, and more likely to get sick'
Leaving your sandwich on your desk all morning can be a risk. "Meat or chicken in temperatures of more than 4c will start to see salmonella growing after two or three hours," says Dr Peter Wilson (UCL Infection).
Read: Daily MailTake the rough with the smooth
No one has come up with a better system than peer review, and its frailties can sometimes work for you as well as against you, says Professor Adrian Furnham (UCL Psychology).
Read: THE More: THE (2)State of independence could prove costly, Scots warned
"Scotland does disproportionately well out of research spending. It's quite hard to see how or why the UK [would have] an interest in paying a subsidy to Scotland," said Alan Trench (UCL Constitution Unit).
Read: THEHow Beetle Overcame Nazi Past to Become Americans' Car
The car's historical lineage did little to dampen its budding reputation in the U.S. during the 1950s, partly because the Nazis never mass produced it, says Dr Bernhard Rieger (UCL History).
Read: Bloomberg More: New York TimesNew opportunities for radar research
"Shock interference is just a reflection of a transmitted signal, and yes if you do it properly you can, for example, detect and track aircraft 100 kilometers away," said Professor Hugh Griffiths (UCL Electronic & Electrical Engineering).
Listen: BBC Radio 4's Material World (from 24 mins)