UCL in the media
Deadly dangers of being a weekend health saint
Professor Hugh Montgomery (UCL Clinical Physiology) says that: "Just two extra 20-minute bouts of exercise a week should help improve general fitness without having to cram it all in".
Read: Daily MailHow to pick yourself up after being taken down a notch
Professor Tomas Chamorro Premuzic (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) explains how to respond to being demoted at work.
Read: Financial TimesAre tall people more likely to get cancer?
Professor Tim Cole (UCL Institute of Child Health) comments on whether tall people really are more likely to get cancer.
Listen: BBC World Service 'More or Less' (from 7 mins 12 secs)Nobel Prize in Physics
Following the award of this year's Nobel Prize in Physics, Dr Andrew Pontzen (UCL Physics & Astronomy) explains what we should learn from the announcement.
Listen: BBC Radio 5 live '5 live Science' (from 27 mins 8 secs)Alternative therapies
Professor David Colquhoun (UCL Neuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) comments on whether hospitals in Essex should pay for alternative therapies.
Listen: BBC Radio Essex 'James Whale' (from 1 hour 8 mins)Economist Sir Richard Blundell among Nobel prize frontrunners
Professor Sir Richard Blundell (UCL Economics) is among the frontrunners to win the economics Nobel Prize when it is announced later today.
Read: Guardian, More: TelegraphReferendum campaigns
Dr Alan Renwick (UCL Constitution Unit) discusses how people are swayed to one side or another during a referendum campaign.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'The World This Weekend' (from 8 mins 25 secs)Restoration to Revolution
To help celebrate National Poetry Day, Professor John Mullan (UCL English Language & Literature) presents his favourite poems from the 18th Century.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'We British' (from 2 mins 50 secs)Report from Iraq: religion lends Yazidis a profound resilience in the face of persecution
Dr Tyler Fisher (UCL SELCS) speaks with Yazidi survivors, laymen and clergy in northern Iraq about what the latest wave of persecution means for their faith.
Read: The ConversationBeryllium
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) explains why beryllium's surprising scarcity is the very reason it can be so harmful to the body.
Listen: BBC World Service 'Business Daily' (from 1 min 30 secs)