UCL in the media
Sex and relationships advice: Do you dread Christmas?
Christmas isn't always a happy time. Dr Petra Boynton (UCL Medical School) offers comprehensive advice for dealing with stress, divorce, separation, loneliness or bereavement over the festive period.
Read: Telegraph'He gives you hope. He is amazing'
Professor Peng Tee Khaw (UCL Institute of Ophthalmology) talks about his work as a consultant ophthalmic surgeon at Moorfields and professor of glaucoma and ocular healing at UCL.
Read: Times (£)Farewell to The Killing: those Danish queries answered
How bad is the financial crisis in Denmark? Does it really rain that much? And what are Danes going to watch after Sarah Lund's final scenes? UCL's Scandinavian Studies department give us some answers.
Read: GuardianBerlusconi's Love Life Lost in Translation
"In Italy the phrase 'Mi sono fidanzato' usually means 'I have a girlfriend or boyfriend' and not 'I am engaged to be married'. This can cause confusion abroad but is pretty clear in the Italian context," says Professor John Foot (UCL Italian).
Read: CNBCAs a Premier Prepares to Depart, the Talk Is of Lost Opportunities
''These are the most unpredictable elections in years,'' said Professor John Foot (UCL Italian). ''It's not worth trying to predict anything. You will just be proved wrong straight away.''
Read: NY Times More: IndependentTouchpad steering wheel keeps eyes on the road
"The computer scientist in me says that's got to be the coolest car ever," says Dr Peter Bentley (UCL Computer Science). "But the petrolhead in me says driving should be about integrating the driver with the car and making the car feel like an extension of your body, not turning it into an iPad on wheels."
Read: New ScientistThe Amazon 'could survive global warming'
Some common species of tree in the Amazon date back more than 8million years and have survived through epochs of massive temperature fluctuations, according to research by Dr Simon Lewis (UCL Geography).
Read: Daily Mail More: UCL NewsHealth Check: Organophosphates
A review of 14 separate studies by Dr Sarah McKenzie Ross (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) shows that organophosphates can damage the brain and nervous system.
Listen: BBC World Service Health Check More: The EcologistNorth star to set UCL's direction
Professor Michael Arthur, the newly appointed president and provost of UCL, has said he would like to see the institution extend its "global footprint".
Read: THE More: Camden New JournalPrince Charles names King George III as his most respected monarch
"I think perhaps what Prince Charles wanted to emphasise was more the fact that George III, in the aftermath of the loss of the American colonies, became a symbol of the nation, national resilience and the determination to bounce back," says Professor Stephen Conway (UCL History).
Read: Telegraph