UCL in the media
Student debt: how UK graduates deal with the burden
Professor Clare Callender (UCL Institute of Education) says that we have 'no idea of the long-term impact' of student debt.
Read: FT (£)The Brain Prize: How "reward" works
The Brain Prize winners for 2017, Professor Peter Dayan (UCL Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit), Professor Ray Dolan (UCL Max Planck Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research) and Professor Wolfram Schultz (University of Cambridge) speak about the brain's reward system.
Listen: BBC World Service 'Health Check' (from the start)Why an hour of song can help with hearing
UCL researchers including Professor Deborah Vickers (UCL Psychology & Language Sciences) and Professor Graham Welch (UCL Institute of Education) have found an hour of song a week can quickly help children with hearing difficulties hear much better.
Read: iNewsShould we love the art if the artist is a monster?
Professor Tamar Garb (UCL History of Art) comments on Gaugin's abhorrent behaviour in the context of a discussion about whether a person's art excuses them.
Read: The Times (£)Leading scientists pick the dozen most significant discoveries and developments of 2017
UCL academics Professor Sophie Scott (UCL Psychology & Language Sciences), Dr Helen Czerski (UCL Mechanical Engineering), Professor Kevin Fong (UCL Science, Technology, Engineering & Public Policy), Professor Mark Miodownik (UCL Mechanical Engineering) and Dr Adam Rutherford (UCL Biosciences) give their take on 2017's best science stories.
Read: GuardianNHS doctors to pilot food prescriptions as poverty soars
Dr George Grimble (UCL Medicine) says food poverty is 'disastrous' for a child's development.
Read: IndependentDevelopments in Alzheimer's treatment
Professor Nick Fox and Professor John Hardy (UCL Institute of Neurology) comment on the likelihood of treatment for Alzheimer's by 2025.
Read: ExpressA Christmas spice that may help reduce your blood cholesterol
Preethy D'Souza (UCL Institute of Education) outlines the health benefits of cinnamon.
Read: The ConversationScientists have developed a DNA test that diagnoses deadly breast cancer one year earlier
Professor Martin Widschwendter (UCL Institute for Women's Health) has developed a DNA test that may diagnose fatal breast cancer one year earlier than current methods.
Read: Daily Mail10 things about Britain's roads
Professor Benjamin Heydecker (UCL Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering) says improvements in the number of road fatalities have been brought about by the 'three Es' of road safety policy: engineering, enforcement and education.
Read: BBC News