UCL in the media
'Spy cameras' are used to target student protesters
Police have used evidence from CCTV cameras in the arrest of four students accused of causing criminal damage to buildings on campus.
Read: The IndependentReindeer gained UV vision after moving to the Arctic
Research by Professor Glen Jeffery (UCL Institute of Ophthalmology) shows that reindeer are able to see using ultraviolet light - an ability which helps them find food and avoid predators.
Read: New ScientistWaiting for Salazar
Professor Neill Lochery (UCL Hebrew and Jewish Studies) looks ahead to next month's Portuguese general election.
Read: Wall Street Journal (£)British universities may lose world-class status
Professor Jonathan Wolff (UCL Philosophy) argues that the Government's spending cuts and restrictions on international recruitment threaten the dominance of British universities.
Read: The GuardianWeather bends noise from highways
Nick Ovenden (UCL Mathematics) explains how the right temperatures and wind conditions can bend highway noise so that it can be heard much further away than expected.
Read: Discovery News, Listen: German Public Radio (in German), More coverage: MSNBCHas Christine Lagarde got what it takes to head the IMF?
Professor Philippe Marliere (UCL French) says that although the French finance minister is the darling of the financial media, her handling of the European bailouts does not bode well.
Read: The GuardianLost in a book? How reading and doing crosswords can block your ability to hear
Professor Nilli Lavie (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) explains how visual and hearing senses share limited brain capacity, often leading to 'inattentional deafness'.
Read: Daily Mail, More coverage: BBC Radio Five Live, The Independent, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, Manchester Evening News, Times of IndiaIs dyscalculia as serious as dyslexia?
Professor Brian Butterworth (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) calls for additional support for people with dyscalculia - the mathematical equivalent of dyslexia.
Listen: BBC Radio 4's 'Today', Read: The Independent, More coverage: BBC 1's 'Breakfast', The Times, Times Educational Supplement,Tractor rage is waste of time, drivers told
Ahead of the Bank Holiday weekend, Professor Ben Heydecker (UCL Transport Studies) looks at the probability of getting stuck in traffic behind a tractor and reassures drivers that it doesn't actually have a huge impact on the duration of their journey.
Read: Daily Telegraph, More coverage: Daily Mail, Scotsman, Daily Mirror, Farmers GuardianNew waste strategy achieves an industry first
UCL's new waste strategy has cut the university's carbon emissions by more than a quarter.
Read: The Guardian