UCL in the media
Science Weekly podcast: An accelerated guide to the Higgs boson
Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics and Astronomy) provides a super-condensed course in quantum mechanics, particle physics and the Standard Model.
Listen: GuardianSmartphones, the internet and the smart energy revolution
Professor Tadj Oreszczyn (UCL Energy Institute) says "we have to radically improve the efficiency of the way we use electricity in buildings."
Read: BBC NewsBrain changes seen in cabbies who take 'The Knowledge'
Professor Eleanor Maguire (UCL Imaging Neuroscience) comments on how taxi drivers' brains rewire while learning their way around London.
Read: BBC News More: Nature Telegraph Times (£) Daily Mail MirrorScientists find 'key' that allows HIV to unlock body's cell
Professor Greg Towers (UCL Department of Infection) said that the discovery would allow them "to stay one step ahead" of the virus, and develop new therapeutic strategies.
Read: The ScotsmanReport considers maltreatment of Children
Professor Ruth Gilbert (UCL Institute of Child Health) claims government policies designed to reduce child maltreatment have been unsuccessful.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 Today (from 54mins 28s) More: GOSH Press ReleaseRussia's badly managed democracy
Dr Andrew Wilson (UCL SSEES) says: "Sunday's Russian Duma elections were dull, but the consequences could be spectacular after a series of strategic mistakes by the authorities."
Read: New Eastern EuropeHow Does a Cell Know Its Size?
Professor Alison Lloyd (UCL Molecular Cell Biology) comments that mammalian cells don't need size-sensing mechanisms to tell them when to divide.
Read: ScienceRadical treatment? Not radical enough
Professor John Martin (UCL Cardiovascular Medicine) comments on the limitations of the government's new Strategy for UK Life Sciences.
Read: Times Higher EducationClassic kit: Wheatstone's Bridge
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) on Charles Wheatstone, and the importance of his 'bridge'.
Read: Chemistry WorldHSJ100: The annual list of the most influential people in health
The Health Service Journal names UCL Provost Professor Malcolm Grant as the 32nd most influential person in health.
Read: Health Service Journal (£)