UCL in the media
Spotlight on wind farm health woes
The Australian government should fund a large research project to determine the impact of wind farms on health, says Nicoleta Dorobantu (UCL Australia).
Read: Adelaide NowUCL professor to head NERC
Professor Duncan Wingham (UCL Earth Sciences) has been appointed chief executive of the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) from 1 January 2012.
Read: Times Higher Education More: Research Fortnight (£)Women doctors will soon outnumber men
"Although women make up the majority of the medical student population they are still under-represented at the top", says Professor Jane Dacre (UCL Medical School). Read:
Daily Mail, More: BBC Radio 4 Today, Independent, Student BMJUK must stay open to foreign students
The FT applauds UCL's "hunger for innovation" and says that universities must continue to be allowed to recruit top students and staff, whatever their origin.
Read: Financial Times (£)He wrestled naked with art. Sometimes he won
Ken Russell was nothing without the power to offend. But he changed the cultural landscape, says Professor John Sutherland (UCL English Language & Literature).
Read: The Times (£)Brawling ex-con to painter, after a stroke
Dr Mark Lythgoe (UCL Centre for Biomedical Imaging) and Professor Sophie Scott (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) on how strokes can change personality and behaviour.
Read: The Times (£)Don't blame older folks for NHS crisis
The NHS may be in trouble, but those who blame our 'ageing population' are missing the big picture, says Professor Steve Iliffe (UCL Primary Care & Population Health).
Read: Morning StarScience Weekly: Your beating heart
Dr Kevin Fong (UCL Neuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) talks about the physiology, chemistry and dynamics of this remarkable organ.
Listen: GuardianKnowing me, knowing you
Alumni Polly Stenham and Victoria Williams on their relationship, and how they met at UCL.
Read: IndependentThe incredible shrinking laboratory or 'lab-on-a-chip'
Professor Tom Duke (UCL Physics & Astronomy) talks about a chip he's developing that can detect whether a blood sample contains HIV in the field.
Read: Guardian