UCL in the media
Gene therapy is cure for 'boy in the bubble' syndrome
Gene therapy programmes developed at »Ê¼Ò»ªÈË Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital have given children with rare immune disorders near normal lives.
Etch-a-Sketch method used for precision superconductors
Research at the London Centre for Nanotechnology shows new ways to make circuits using superconductors.
Read: UCL Press Release, , More coverage: Wired, Nature, PC ProNatural born screamers
Men and women differ in the way they anticipate unpleasant emotional experiences, according to research by Dr Giulia Galli (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience).
, Other coverage: BBC Radio Scotland, BBC Oxford, BBC Three Counties RadioHow slavery was excluded from Scottish history books
UCL History's 'Legacies of British Slave-ownership' project is referenced in an article about how profits from slavery played an important role in the transformation of Scotland from a rural to an urban-based society.
,Pornography linked to huge rise in plastic surgery for women
Demand for female genital cosmetic surgery has risen five-fold in a decade on the NHS yet most women do not need it, UCL researchers have found.
From birth to toddlerhood
Dr Mary Fewtrell (UCL Institute of Child Health) discusses the potential consequences of 'feeding-up' babies which have a low birth weight, but which are otherwise healthy.
Scientists hail Parkinson's brain cells 'breakthrough'
Dr Michael Devine (UCL Institute of Neurology) collaborates on research where stem cells from one of the most rapidly-progressing forms of Parkinson's disease have been generated.
Fancy being a judge? Try it for a weekend first
The UCL Judicial Institute is running a two-day course aimed at helping lawyers decide if they have what it takes to become judges.
Health benefits of breeding with cavemen
Matt Pope (UCL Institute of Archaeology) comments on whether interbreeding with Neanderthals may have given our ancestors an evolutionary boost.
When two tribes meet: collaborations between artists and scientists
Professors David McAlpine (UCL Ear Institute) and Valerie Hazan (UCL Speech, Hearing and Phonetic Sciences) discuss their current collaborations with artists.