wire

« BACK

University College London


Results 3351 - 3400 of 6397.


Health - Pharmacology - 05.07.2021
Opinion: Shall we vaccinate our children? We could start by asking them first

Event - 05.07.2021
Wellbeing workshops and peer support

Health - Life Sciences - 05.07.2021
Being clean and hygienic need not impair childhood immunity
Being clean and hygienic need not impair childhood immunity
The theory that modern society is too clean, leading to defective immune systems in children, should be swept under the carpet, according to a new study by researchers at UCL and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

Pedagogy - 02.07.2021
Opinion: Young children should not learn about the Shoah
There has been a four-fold increase in the Holocaust being taught in history at the lower end of Key Stage Three, but we must ensure students are old enough to fully understand it, says Professor Stuart Foster and Professor Ruth-Anne Lenga (both UCL Institute of Education).

Economics - 02.07.2021
Opinion: Is the UK housing bubble about to burst’ These are the best and worst scenarios

Health - Pharmacology - 02.07.2021
Analysis: Could expanding the Covid-19 case definition improve the UK's pandemic response'
Analysis: Could expanding the Covid-19 case definition improve the UK’s pandemic response’
PhD candidate Alex Crozier (UCL Biosciences) and colleagues write in the BMJ about the potential opportunities and challenges of expanding the symptom list linked to self-isolation and testing as vaccines are rolled out.

Environment - 01.07.2021
Opinion: Canada is a warning - more and more of the world will soon be too hot for humans

Music - Pedagogy - 01.07.2021
Spotlight on... Professor Li Wei

Health - Innovation - 01.07.2021
Planning committee success for new world-leading UCL and Moorfields eye centre
Planning committee success for new world-leading UCL and Moorfields eye centre

Health - Career - 30.06.2021
Some health habits deserve to stay

Psychology - 30.06.2021
Opinion: understanding what feeling ’empty’ means is important for improving our mental health
Trainee Clinical Psychologist Shona Herron (UCL Psychology & Language Sciences) co-authors an article discussing her research into feelings of 'emptiness' and what they can mean for people's mental health.

Health - Economics - 30.06.2021
Framework to reduce inequities for future generations launched by Professor Sir Michael Marmot

Agronomy & Food Science - 30.06.2021
Opinion: Why efforts by Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana to help cocoa farmers haven’t worked

Health - Pharmacology - 30.06.2021
How blood tests are transforming cancer treatment
How blood tests are transforming cancer treatment

Environment - Social Sciences - 30.06.2021
Exploring the role of museums in tackling climate change

Health - Pharmacology - 30.06.2021
Insight: How blood tests are transforming cancer treatment
Insight: How blood tests are transforming cancer treatment

Electroengineering - 30.06.2021
UCL academic named MIT Technology Review 2021 Innovator under 35
UCL academic named MIT Technology Review 2021 Innovator under 35

Environment - 29.06.2021
Opinion: The reason nuclear energy isn’t a safe bet in a warming world
Before we build any more nuclear power stations, the industry must consider how models of future weather extremes and climate change are likely to affect them, says Honorary Senior Research Associate

Health - Social Sciences - 29.06.2021
Opinion: Society must repay its debt to the young

Event - Campus - 28.06.2021
UCL alumnus receives acclaimed humanitarian award in memory of Princess Diana

Campus - 28.06.2021
Returning to campus - connecting to eduroam

Health - Pharmacology - 26.06.2021
Gene editing therapy paves way for revolution in treatment of genetic disorders
Gene editing therapy paves way for revolution in treatment of genetic disorders
The development of an investigational therapy which 'edits' a harmful gene in patients with a debilitating condition called amyloidosis could pave the way for a revolution in the treatment of genetic disorders, finds a new study led by UCL scientists.

Health - Life Sciences - 25.06.2021
Project helping prevent future pandemics wins global prize

Economics - Administration - 24.06.2021
Opinion: Brexit - five years after the referendum, here are five things we’ve learned

Astronomy & Space - Physics - 24.06.2021
Cosmic dawn occurred 250 to 350 million years after Big Bang
Cosmic dawn, when stars formed for the first time, occurred 250 million to 350 million years after the beginning of the universe, according to a new study led by researchers at UCL and the University of Cambridge. The study, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society , suggests that the NASA James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), scheduled to launch in November, will be sensitive enough to observe the birth of galaxies directly.

Linguistics & Literature - Politics - 24.06.2021
Opinion: The real reason Putin targeted HMS Defender
Claims that Russia's Border Guard ships fired warning shots at HMS Defender, reinforces the sense of Russia being not the kind of mature great power Vladimir Putin tried to present at Geneva, says Honorary Professor Mark Galeotti (UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies).

Economics - Innovation - 24.06.2021
UCL economics experts advising Canada's British Columbia government
UCL economics experts advising Canada’s British Columbia government

Innovation - 24.06.2021
Welsh universities form new network in response to UCL report
Universities in Wales have revealed plans to form a collaborative new initiative to strengthen research and innovation in Wales, set up in response to a 2020 report by UCL Chair of Science and Research Policy, Professor Graeme Reid.

Social Sciences - 24.06.2021
UN official launches UCL centre for disaster warnings research
The new UCL Warning Research Centre, the world's only institute researching the role of warning systems in managing hazards, risks, vulnerabilities and disasters, has been formally launched by Mami Mizutori, the head of the UN's Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR).

Health - Politics - 23.06.2021
Opinion: What we can learn about risk from the Covid experience
Humans don't perceive risk accurately, and it's important that we learn the right lessons about risk from the Covid-19 pandemic, says Professor Geoff Mulgan (UCL STEaPP).

Health - Pharmacology - 23.06.2021
How to get your coronavirus vaccine

Health - Event - 23.06.2021
Spotlight on... Deborah Lucas-Georgiou

Social Sciences - 22.06.2021
Opinion: Balancing care and surveillance with smartphones and contact tracing
The development of smartphone technology aimed at curbing the spread of a pandemic across the globe has exposed a fine line between individual privacy and collective welfare, says Professor Daniel Miller (UCL Anthropology). The astonishing rise of smartphones in everyday life has created many solutions (GPS maps, internet browsing and messaging, to name just a few).

Event - Life Sciences - 22.06.2021
Alan Thompson receives prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award

Event - 21.06.2021
Sign up to the Supporting Change programme to support your new ways of working

Health - Pharmacology - 21.06.2021
How do COVID-19 vaccines work and are they safe’

Health - Environment - 21.06.2021
Opinion: ’Natural’ disasters are due to societal failures, here’s a six-point pandemic recovery plan
Covid-19 may be a 'natural' disaster, but disasters occur due to societal failures, and steps can be taken to mitigate the risk of future pandemics, says Professor Ilan Kelman (UCL Institute for Risk & Disaster Reduction).

Health - 18.06.2021
UK-wide e-cigarette trial to help homeless quit smoking
A trial led by UCL and LSBU researchers will investigate whether e-cigarettes could help people experiencing homelessness to quit smoking.

Health - 18.06.2021
Older adults with multiple medical issues worse affected by cancelled operations
One in eight adults over 50 had a hospital operation or treatment cancelled last year and this rose to one in five for those with two or more existing medical conditions, according to new research led by UCL. The most common treatments cancelled were eye and cancer surgery. The research, published as a briefing paper today, also shows that fewer cases of dementia were diagnosed in lockdown compared to before the pandemic but diagnoses for arthritis, chronic lung disease, diabetes and hypertension all increased during the pandemic.

Psychology - Social Sciences - 18.06.2021
UCL experts help shape the Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood
UCL experts help shape the Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood

Pharmacology - Health - 17.06.2021
£100m boost to translate early-stage science into new transformative treatments

Health - Social Sciences - 17.06.2021
A fifth of people are worried about catching Covid-19
A fifth (21%) of people are currently worried about catching Covid-19, while just under a fifth (18%) are worried about becoming seriously ill from the disease, find UCL researchers as part of the Covid-19 Social Study.

Pedagogy - Health - 17.06.2021
Spotlight on... Joanna Stroud

Environment - 16.06.2021
UK needs to step up efforts to mitigate climate change
Efforts to tackle climate change are not keeping up with the fast pace of global warming and increasing climate risks, according to a report by the Climate Change Committee involving UCL experts.

Innovation - Art & Design - 16.06.2021
UCL and Serpentine partnership to support innovation across art, law and technology

Health - 15.06.2021
Government announcement about the delay to lockdown easing
Government announcement about the delay to lockdown easing

Campus - Pharmacology - 15.06.2021
Delay to lockdown easing and return to campus

Economics - 14.06.2021
Opinion: The UK economy could be transformed by a central bank digital currency
The Bank of England's consultation on public digital cash could represent the biggest shift in the monetary system for 200 years, says Dr Josh Ryan-Collins (UCL Institute for Innovation & Public Purpose).

Environment - Social Sciences - 12.06.2021
Scientists warn G7 that cost of breaching 1.5 C warming limit will far exceed costs of achieving it

Politics - Social Sciences - 11.06.2021
Opinion: Biden, the G-7 and the limits of multilateralism
President Biden's election victory led many to hope for meaningful progress on international issues, but there are multiple reasons why expectations should be tempered, say Dr Thomas Gift and Dr Julie Norman (Both UCL Centre on US Politics).