UCL in the media
Internet usage boosts health of the elderly
A study led by Lindsay Kobayashi (UCL Epidemiology & Health) has found that older people who use the internet regularly are healthier because they are better informed about medical issues.
Read: Daily Mail, More: Daily ExpressMonster telescope needs mind-bending mathematics to uncover secrets of the universe
Dr Jason McEwen (UCL Space & Climate Physics) explains how the new theory of compressed sensing could play an essential role in recovering images from fragments of information far in the distant universe.
Read: The ConversationMurderous addresses
Dr Dimitrios Tsivrikos (UCL Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology) explains the psychological processes that go into buying a house.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'You and Yours' (from 34 mins 55 secs)Morality and the Law
Professor Philip Schofield (UCL Bentham Project) explains Jeremy Bentham's radical concepts, which promised the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people.
Listen: BBC radio 4 'A History of Ideas' (from 2 mins 30 secs)Can we stop the rise of the career politician?
The Parliamentary Candidates UK (PCUK) study, led by Dr Jennifer Hudson (UCL Constitution Unit), shows that that a third of all candidates for the 2015 general election already have political jobs as councillors, advisers or union officials.
Read: TelegraphWhat's next for the world's 5 million IVF babies?
Professor Alastair Sutcliffe (UCL Institute of Child Health) explains how studying 20 years' worth of data can help scientists to understand the long-term health effects of IVF - and how to improve its success rate and safety.
Read: GuardianMagic shoes: How to hear yourself instantly happy
Research led by Dr Ana Tajadura Jimenez (UCL Interaction Centre) as part of the Hearing Body Project, has found that It is possible to 'hear yourself happy' by changing the noises that the body hears as it moves around.
Read: New Scientist, More: Telegraph, Daily MailCity's former planning chief on why London is 'unplannable'
Professor Peter Rees (UCL Bartlett School of Planning) takes a boat trip on the Thames to point out the highs and lows of the capital's changing skyline.
Watch: Financial TimesThe voice of scientific reason has been lost
Professor John Hardy (UCL Molecular Neuroscience) comments on the abolishment of the Chief Scientific Adviser to the President of the European Commission post, saying: "It is a sad fact that often the last thing politicians like is rational advice".
Read: IndependentAntidepressant prescriptions soar to 50m a year
Dr Joanna Moncrieff (UCL Psychiatry) comments on new figures which show more than 50 million prescriptions for anti-depressants were written last year.
Read: Daily Express