UCL in the media
Spying on Europe's farms with satellites and drones
There have been few prosecutions in the UK based on satellite evidence, says Ray Purdy (UCL Laws).
Read: BBC NewsWaste light captured from a mobile could charge its battery
Arman Ahnood (London Centre for Nanotechnology) and colleagues believe that the extra light phone displays emit could be reused by putting a thin-film PV cells around the display's edges, leading to a phone that never has to be plugged in.
Read: The EngineerInterview with Julia Vogl: Winner of the Creative Works Competition
Julia Vogl talks about winning the Aesthetica Creative Works Competition, and her work Colouring the Invisible, installed at UCL SSEES.
Read: Aesthetica MagazineCost of policing football matches
Justin Kurland (UCL Security and Crime Science) says that football clubs should be paying their fair share and should be held responsible.
Watch: BBC London News (from 20mins) More: BBC One's Inside Out London (from 9mins)How your brain tells you where you are
How do you remember where you parked your car? Dr Neil Burgess (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) studies the neural mechanisms that map the space around us, and how they link to memory and imagination.
Watch: TEDPredictive policing
Professor Shane Johnson (UCL Security and Crime Science) comments on predictive policing, and the deployment of police officers on the basis of probability.
Watch: Channel 4 News More: GuardianSmoking linked to faster cognitive decline in men
A study led by Dr Severine Sabia (UCL Epidemiology and Public Health) has shown that middle-aged men who smoke suffered more rapid cognitive decline than peers who have never smoked.
Read: LA Times More: Times of India China DailyGuardian book club
Professor John Mullan (UCL English Language & Literature) talks about The Woman in Black by Susan Hill, and analyses the storyteller in the book.
Read: GuardianCool sun could host habitable planet
Dr Lewis Dartnell (UCL Space and Climate Physics), says that the discovery of a new "potentially rocky exoplanet orbiting within a star's habitable zone is very intriguing."
Read: Physics WorldOn your head: They're always with us - the undeserving rich and poor
The Victorians, with all their moral certainty and a dose of puritan piety, were happy to endorse the concept of the deserving and the undeserving poor, says Professor Adrian Furnham (UCL Health Psychology).
Read: Times (£)