UCL in the media
Research offers new ways out of depression
Dr Jonathan Roiser (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) comments on the use of electrical stimulation devices in severe depression and bipolar disorder.
Botox and incontinence
Dr Tamsin Greenwell (UCL Research Department of Urology) comments on the use of botox to treat urinary incontinence.
Internships must be more than a posh child swap
An internship is the white-collar equivalent of the apprenticeship. It is meant to be about on-the-job training, says Professor Adrian Furnham (UCL Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology).
Elite lecturers fail feedback test
A national poll by The Sunday Times shows that several top Russell group universities rank among the bottom 10 institutions for the quality of academic feedback on students' work, despite belonging to the Russell Group of top British research universities.
Call to test children for the ovarian cancer gene
Dr Sue Gessler (UCL Institute for Women's Health) says early genetic testing would help women to "live with the uncertainty" of getting the disease.
Majority of pupils forced to resit at flagship academy
A flagship academy hailed as "the future of education" by Labour peer Lord Adonis has launched an internal review after the "majority of students" were forced into exam resits.
Fashion 'too scared to innovate with tech', says ex Topshop marketing chief
UCL spin-out, Chirp, has partnered with Topshop during London Fashion Week to inspire the fashion world through the power of digital birdsong.
Tomorrow's cities: Sensor networks for the elderly
"Smart homes are not about internet-connected fridges, who wants that? But if sensors could tell me when my dad opened a fridge, I would know that he is OK," says Professor Andrew Hudson-Smith (UCL CASA).
The future of housing
Dr Jez Wingfield (UCL Energy Institute) talks to Radio4 about the government's Zero Carbon Hub report.
Tuition fees rise has not put off applications by disadvantaged students
A study found that the number of 18-year-olds applying from poorer areas included a small rise in applications to England's 30 most selective universities - including Oxford, UCL and Manchester...