UCL in the media
A brain tumour is making me go deaf - so why does the NHS refuse to 'zap' it?
Professor Anthony Wright (UCL Ear Institute) talks about the risks of surgically removing brain tumours. "Surgery would pose a significant risk. Nerves affecting hearing, balance and facial muscles can be damaged," he said.
Bats and smartphones: will 'bat walks' make us love them?
Professor Kate Jones (UCL Genetics, Evolution & Environment) talks about the new technology that is helping scientists and members of the public learn more about the little-understood lives of bats.
London 2012: How will commuters change for Games?
Fabian Neuhaus (UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis) talks about how he's tracking commuters through-out the Olympics to see how their journeys change.
The coalition's millstone
Dr Meg Russell (UCL Constitution Unit) comments on the government self-harms over a proposal to give Britain an elected upper house.
Underground movement
Jonathan Reades (UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis) talks about how he's using Oyster card data to identify what he calls the "pulse of the city".
DNA study bolsters disputed view of migration into North America
North America was first populated by three waves of migrants from Siberia rather than just a single migration, according to research led by Dr Andres Ruiz-Linares (UCL Genetics, Evolution & Environment).
Parenting support 'should not just be for poorest'
"This framework addresses the fact that we are currently failing our children on a grand scale," says Professor Sir Michael Marmot (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health).
You, the editor
UCL student Anna Temkin (UCL English Language & Literature) reviews The Times.
Blink: A Horizon Guide to the Senses
Dr Kevin Fong (»Ê¼Ò»ªÈËeuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) looks back through 40 years of Horizon archives to find out what science has taught us about our tools of perception.
In Preventing Alzheimer's, Mutation May Aid Drug Quest
The research "is obviously right," says Professor John Hardy (UCL Molecular Neuroscience), a discoverer of the first gene mutation found to cause the disease. "The statistics and the finding are pretty secure."