UCL in the media
Virtual 'mirror' of world to help predict future
Professor Steven Bishop (UCL Mathematics) talks about FuturICT, a project which aims to develop a computer model of the world's population, economy and society.
Read: Times (£)Screwball comedies take centre stage in new BFI season
Professor Peter Swaab (UCL English Language & Literature) comments on US screwball comedy films, which are currently being shown at London's BFI.
Read: MetroMeteor showers in coming days
We could be getting some spectacular meteor showers in the coming days. Dr Lucie Green (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) explains how and why.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 Today (from 2hrs 44mins)Who shot Betty? A murder mystery
When a rare hen harrier was found dead on a Yorkshire moor, experts at the UCL Institute of Orthopaedics and Musculoskeletal Science used scanning electron microscopy to find out more.
Read: FT (£) More: Times (£)If that's genetics, then I'm the Queen of Sheba
Professor David Balding (UCL Genetics Institute) comments on the dubious claims made by the owner of BritainsDNA during an interview on BBC Radio 4.
Read: Times (£)Pension age to be linked to rising life expectancy
Professor Sir Michael Marmot (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health) says that according to the most recent ONS figures, the average age to which people could expect to remain in good health was around 64 for men and 66 for women.
Read: FT (£) More: TelegraphBletchley's forgotten heroes
"People tell me to stop saying we should save Bletchley Park now, it's saved," says Dr Sue Black (UCL Computer Science). "But there's a lot of work to be done telling the story of what was done here."
Read: TelegraphSir Paul Coleridge's gay marriage comments 'have damaged the judiciary'
Professor Richard Moorhead (UCL Laws) comments on Sir Paul's intervention.
Read: Times (£)Guardian book club
Professor John Mullan (UCL English Language & Literature) talks about The Suspicions of Mr Whicher by Kate Summerscale, and looks at fact and fiction in the story.
Read: Guardian'Spiritual' people at higher risk of mental health problems
People who claim to be 'spiritual' but not religious are often struggling to cope mentally, according to a study by Professor Michael King and colleagues.
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