UCL in the media
Line of attack
Professor John Masters (UCL Research Department of Urology) comments on the contamination of laboratory cell cultures.
Read: Science (£)Too much praise may make kids narcissistic
Professor Peter Fonagy (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) believes that narcissism in children has a stronger correlation with parents undervaluing their children or failing to give praise when it is due.
Read: New ScientistData visualisation: Science on the map
Dr Duncan Smith (UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis) and Oliver O'Brien (UCL Geography) explain how they have used customized mapping tools in their research.
Read: NatureIcy plumes bursting from Saturn's moon Enceladus suggest it could harbour life
Professor Andrew Coates (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) looks at the possibility of finding life on Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons.
Read: The ConversationTreating everyone as equal is a recipe for disaster
A study led by Dr Bahador Bahrami (UCL Cognitive Neuroscience) has found that people of differing competence tend to give each other's views equal weight, preventing them from making the best group decisions.
Read: Times (£), More: UCL NewsMore heritage sites at mercy of Isis as America ducks airstrikes
Dr Samuel Hardy (UCL Archaeology) says that Isis appears "genuinely millennial" in its desire to wipe out Iraq's cultural heritage - but "at the same time it needs money".
Read: Times (£)The End of Development
Professor Henrietta Moore (UCL Institute for Global Prosperity) argues that the age of development is over, and that we need to move to new ideas about how to improve human lives.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Analysis'The Life Scientific: John O'Keefe
Professor John O'Keefe (UCL Cell & Developmental Biology) explains his research into 'place cells' in the brain and what it was like to win a Nobel Prize.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'The Life Scientific'What's your superpowder?
Dr George Grimble (UCL Liver & Digestive Health) comments on potential benefits and limitations of powdered vegetable supplements, which he describes as a "pretty evidence-free zone".
Read: Evening StandardOutcry over Isis destruction of ancient Assyrian site of Nimrud
Dr Mark Altaweel (UCL Archaeology) comments on the destruction of the ancient Assyrian archaeological site of Nimrud in Iraq by ISIS.
Read: Guardian