UCL in the media
Beecroft Report on employment law leaked
Dr Nicola Countouris (UCL Laws) comments on labour regulation in the UK compared to other countries in the EU.
Older mothers have success with children
Children of older mothers have a more extensive early age vocabulary and are better at recognising shapes and patterns, according to research by Dr Alastair Sutcliffe (UCL Institute of Child Health).
Guardian University Guide league table
UCL has come sixth in the Guardian's University Guide 2013 league table.
Breaking ice on Jupiter's moons
"Studying these watery worlds is the next vital step beyond Mars in the search for the conditions for life in our solar system," says Professor Andrew Coates (UCL Space & Climate Physics).
Guardian book club
Professor John Mullan (UCL English Language & Literature) talks about Gilead by Marilynne Robinson, and looks at readers' responses to the book.
Bike wheels lead the way for bespoke advertising
UCL student Art Stavenka (UCL SSEES) has won a £7,500 loan for developing special strips of LEDs which attach to bike spokes. When moving, the LEDs enable computer-generated images to be displayed.
The algorithmic arms race
"It's a bit like a war ... you have to keep on upgrading your armaments," says Professor Philip Treleaven (UCL Computer Science). "You're looking for ever-newer algorithms and so you're using broader sets of data and non-traditional data."
Two-part Banana Theory installation takes sustainability to Chelsea College parade green
Students from UCL, Chelsea College of Art & Design, and University of the Arts London have used QR code technology and installation art to raise awareness of sustainability issues.
Facebook shows how university is a startup's friend
The years spent at university provide the safest, most supportive environment for entrepreneurs, and expose them to innovative research and support, financial or otherwise, says Professor Stephen Caddick (UCL Vice-Provost, Enterprise).
Memristors in silicon promising for dense, fast memory
UCL researchers led by Dr Anthony Kenyon (UCL Electronic & Electrical Engineering) have revealed details of a promising way to make a fundamentally different kind of computer memory chip.
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