UCL in the media
First measles fatality feared as man found dead in Swansea flat
"With infectious diseases such as measles, the spread depends very much on how vulnerable and infected people mix," said Dr Helen Bedford (UCL Institute of Child Health).
Read: Guardian More: Mirror Watch: ITV News Channel 4 News BBC London News (from 5 mins) More: Guardian More: LBC Listen: BBC Radio London's Drivetime (from 20 mins) More: Voice of RussiaHilary Mantel and Duchess of Cambridge in US list of influential people
"One is very photographic and one is very readable. That's what we are now, images and words," said Professor John Sutherland (UCL English Language & Literature).
Read: Times (£)Been there, got the Higgs T-shirt. Now Cern scientists seek invisible dark matter
"It is like we have landed on a shore of new physics," says Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy).
Read: Times (£) More: Herald Scotland TelegraphDavid Colquhoun, Twitter-addicted scourge of scientific quackery
Professor David Colquhoun (UCL Biosciences) is the take-no-prisoners debunker of pseudoscience on his unmissable blog.
Read: GuardianInside the Materials Library
"People say, what do you think of smart materials? I say, all materials are smart; you just haven't asked the right questions," said Dr Zoe Laughlin (UCL Institute of Making).
Read: TelegraphOn burrowed time: Italy roots out mafia dons in secret bunkers
"The past few years have seen an epidemic of bunker building by Italy's mafias; dozens and dozens of them, quite possibly hundreds. It's all but unprecedented in mafia history," said Professor John Dickie (UCL Italian).
Read: Sunday Times (£)Thatcherism on the couch, with no shades of grey
Thatcherism is an ideology with which many people can identify. It's a heady mix of Victorian values, free-market economics and individual liberty, writes Professor Adrian Furnham (UCL Psychology).
Read: Sunday Times (£)The son running for his mother with rare spine cancer
Professor Adrienne Flanagan (UCL Pathology) comments on a rare spine cancer chordoma: "The cancer originates from notochordal cells, which form the spine in a developing foetus."
Read: Daily MailCameron is told to drop snooping on web users
Professor Angela Sasse (UCL Computer Science) was one of nine cyber-security experts to send a letter to David Cameron warning that there is little evidence that new powers are needed.
Read: Times (£) More: Daily MailMost popular surnames of Great Britain mapped
Alistair Leak (UCL Security & Crime Science) and Dr Muhammad Adnan (UCL Geography) have created a map of the most popular surnames around the UK.
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