UCL in the media
Health chiefs dismiss fad diets as money-spinning 'nutribabble'
Professor David Colquhoun (UCL Neuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) says a lot of diet marketing can be summed up as "nutribabble".
Read: Times (£)Smell and reversing paralysis
Professor Geoffrey Raisman (UCL Brain Repair & Rehabilitation) explains his research looking at whether the nerve cells that help us smell can reverse paralysis from spinal injury.
Listen: BBC World Service 'The Science Hour' (from 26 mins 58 secs)Dark matter
Dr Chamkaur Ghag (UCL Physics & Astronomy) explains how we can detect dark matter here on Earth.
Listen: BBC Radio 5 live '5 live Science' (from 13 mins 25 secs)Maths and marriage
Dr Hannah Fry (UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis) explains what maths and marriage have in common.
Listen: BBC Radio 5 live '5 live Science' (from 53 mins 21 secs)Would capping student fees at £6,000 be as damaging as universities make out?
Dr Gillian Wyness (UCL Institute of Education) explains why Labour's pledge to cap tuition fees at £6000 should not be totally condemned.
Read: The ConversationCancer screening - the gap between what people say and what they do
Research by Dr Jo Waller (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health) examines how the public views cancer screening.
Read: The ConversationCyber-security experts judge '$1bn bank hack' report
Commenting on a report into cyber-attacks on banks, Dr Steven Murdoch (UCL Computer Science) said that while there were undoubtedly "large numbers" involved, the losses had been overestimated.
Read: BBC NewsDon't talk in front of the TV
Dr Steven Murdoch (UCL Computer Science) explores how we interact with machines.
Listen: BBC World Service 'Tech Tent'We've got the evolution of complex cells inside-out
Professor Buzz Baum (UCL/MRC Lab for Molecular Cell Biology) explains how complex cells evolved on Earth.
Read: New Scientist (£)The place names everyone says wrong
Professor John Wells (UCL Speech, Hearing & Phonetic Sciences) says that place names are often mispronounced because of "the opaqueness of English spelling, which does not enable us to predict pronunciation with any certainty".
Read: Daily Mail