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University College London
Results 701 - 720 of 2143.
Health - Psychology - 12.04.2022
Worries about finances outstrip concerns about catching Covid-19
More people are now more worried about their finances (38%), than catching Covid-19 (33%), find UCL researchers as part of the Covid-19 Social Study. The proportion of people concerned about finances is up from 32% in January 2022 - the highest level since the start of the pandemic two years ago - and likely reflects the pressures felt by the 'cost of living crisis'.
Health - Pharmacology - 12.04.2022

The reasons why Covid-19 causes severe inflammation in some people, leading to acute respiratory distress and multi-organ damage, has been revealed in a new study involving a UCL scientist. Published in Nature , the study led by researchers at Boston Children's Hospital (US) , found evidence that the virus might activate inflammasomes, large molecules that trigger a cascade of inflammatory responses that ends in cell death.
Psychology - Social Sciences - 11.04.2022

Feeling a sense of purpose or meaning in life is associated with a lower risk of dementia years later, finds a new review of evidence led by UCL researchers. The academics were looking at whether positive psychological constructs, which also included positive mood and optimism and found that purpose and meaning in life were the key factors consistently associated with reduced risk, they report in Ageing Research Reviews .
Physics - 08.04.2022

An international team including researchers at UCL have made the most precise measurement of an elementary particle - which does not match predictions under the guiding theory of physics. The Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF) collaboration, which involves 400 scientists from around the world, have measured the mass of the W boson, one of nature's force-carrying particles.
Physics - 08.04.2022

First Light Fusion, which was co-founded by UCL's Head of Mechanical Engineering, Professor Yiannis Ventikos, has declared a world first in nuclear fusion. The Oxford University spinout has managed to accomplish the reaction by using a unique projectile method for the first time. The approach used by First Light Fusion has now been verified by the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) and involves using a 22-metre gas gun to fire a 100g projectile at 6.5km a second at a fuel pellet containing tritium and deuterium.
Health - 08.04.2022

Around 180,000 avoidable deaths over 14 years in fast-growing tropical cities were caused by a rapid rise in emerging air pollution, a study led by researchers at UCL and the University of Birmingham has revealed. The international team of scientists aimed to address data gaps in air quality for 46* future megacities in Africa, Asia and the Middle East using space-based observations from instruments onboard NASA and European Space Agency (ESA) satellites for 2005 to 2018.
Life Sciences - Health - 07.04.2022
Brain charts map rapid growth and slow decline across lifespan
An international team of researchers involving UCL has created a series of brain charts spanning our entire lifespan - from a 15-week-old foetus to 100-year-old adult - that show how our brains expand rapidly in early life and slowly shrink as we age. The charts are the result of a research project spanning six continents and bringing together possibly the largest ever MRI datasets ever aggregated - almost 125,000 brain scans from over 100 different studies - reported in a new Nature paper.
Health - 07.04.2022
1 in 3 UK cancer patients diagnosed as emergencies, but not a ’UK-only’ problem
More than a third of cancers in the UK are discovered after patients are rushed to hospital, one of the highest rates in comparable high-income countries, finds a new study led by UCL researchers. The study, funded by Cancer Research UK and cancer societies in participating countries, found also that countries with higher incidences of these emergency presentations had poorer survival rates for patients.
Health - 07.04.2022
A third of UK cancer patients diagnosed as emergencies
More than a third of cancers in the UK are discovered after patients are rushed to hospital, one of the highest rates in comparable high-income countries, finds a new study led by UCL researchers. The study, funded by Cancer Research UK and cancer societies in participating countries, found also that countries with higher incidences of these emergency presentations had poorer survival rates for patients.
Health - Pharmacology - 07.04.2022

Lower Covid-19 vaccine uptake among Black ethnic groups in London compared to White British groups was driven by trust, including mistrust in the vaccine itself and in authorities administering it, according to research led by UCL. The peer-reviewed study, published in the Journal of Public Health, was undertaken by UCL researchers funded by National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) ARC North Thames, in collaboration with the Government's Office for Health Improvement and Disparities, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) as well as other London partners.
Life Sciences - Health - 06.04.2022
Specific genes involved in schizophrenia identified for the first time
Landmark research, involving scientists at UCL, has for the first time identified ten genes with extremely rare protein-disrupting mutations, that significantly increase an individual's risk of developing schizophrenia. In a linked paper researchers also identified an unprecedented number of genetic links to schizophrenia in the human genome - the body's DNA blueprint.
Health - Social Sciences - 04.04.2022
Pandemic ’shielding’ led to two-fold increase in depressive symptoms in older people
Older people who were shielding throughout the pandemic were nearly twice as likely to experience depressive symptoms compared to those who were not, even after accounting for loneliness and having fewer social contacts, according to researchers from UCL. The study from UCL and the University of Manchester is published today in the British Journal of Psychiatry.
Environment - 04.04.2022

Immediate and deep emissions reductions are required across all sectors - as well as widespread use of carbon removal technology - to limit warming to 1.5°C, according to a new Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, involving contributions from UCL academics. Released today, the report assesses the literature on the scientific, technological, environmental, economic and social aspects of climate change mitigation.
Pharmacology - Health - 31.03.2022

Global opioid sales increased by an estimated 4% annually from 2015 to 2019, but massive disparities in access to essential pain relief medications persist between countries, finds a study led by UCL researchers. Opioid use in some countries in Africa and South America was less than one tenth of 1% of the rates in wealthier countries in North America, Europe and Australia, according to the findings published in The Lancet Public Health .
Health - Life Sciences - 31.03.2022
Lower life expectancies of socially disadvantaged linked to reduced microbial exposures
Inadequate exposure to microbial organisms, which are essential for healthy human development, may help to explain the reduced life expectancies experienced by people of 'low socio-economic status' (SES), according to a new review by a UCL researcher. Around the world, households and individuals of low SES, which are defined by very low income/wealth and low educational level, are significantly more likely to experience multiple health issues, and in the most extreme situations, life expectancy can be 20-30 years lower than more wealthy and privileged individuals.
Forensic Science - Health - 30.03.2022

Fewer cars are broken into at night on roads with part-night lighting (PNL), where street lights are switched off between midnight and 5am, finds researchers from UCL and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. The rate of thefts from cars at night was halved on roads with PNL, compared to the same roads before PNL was introduced.
Health - 30.03.2022

People who grew up in rural or suburban areas have better spatial navigation skills than those raised in cities, particularly cities with grid-pattern streets, finds a new study led by researchers at UCL, University of Lyon and the University of East Anglia (UEA). The researchers also found that people whose home cities had grid layouts were slightly better at navigating similarly organised street patterns, despite having poorer performance overall, as early childhood environments influence not only navigation ability, but navigation styles as well.
Innovation - Pharmacology - 25.03.2022

Medicines can be printed in seven seconds in a new 3D-printing technique that could enable rapid on-site production of medicines, reports a UCL-led research team. The findings published in the journal, Additive Manufacturing , improve the prospects of how 3D printers could be integrated into fast-paced clinical settings for on-demand production of personalised medicines.
Health - 24.03.2022
Cases of cognitive decline in older people more than doubles in ten years
Cases of cognitive decline in older people, where a doctor has assessed someone following concerns about memory and noted their brain function has been affected, have more than doubled over the past ten years, according to UCL researchers. The researchers set out to see if there had been an increase in the numbers of older people who were reporting their first concerns about memory loss or cognitive decline to their doctor and what their chances of developing dementia were after consultation.
Social Sciences - Health - 23.03.2022

Teenagers who take part in arts and cultural activities, such as dance, drama, reading and going to concerts, are less likely to engage in antisocial and criminalised behaviour up to two years later, according to a new study by UCL and University of Florida researchers. For the peer-reviewed study, published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence (JOYO), researchers looked at data from more than 25,000 teenagers in the United States who had filled out questionnaires over several years.
Health - Today
Cortical thickness, schizophrenia, and causality in psychiatry: when the trace is mistaken for the cause
Cortical thickness, schizophrenia, and causality in psychiatry: when the trace is mistaken for the cause
Career - Today
Low-income students and girls are steered away from 'risky' creative careers at school
Low-income students and girls are steered away from 'risky' creative careers at school

Environment - Today
UCalgary expedition, with NASA, Canadian and European space agencies, sets out to better understand state of Arctic ice
UCalgary expedition, with NASA, Canadian and European space agencies, sets out to better understand state of Arctic ice

Social Sciences - Mar 24
Young people's wellbeing is improving in Greater Manchester, major survey finds
Young people's wellbeing is improving in Greater Manchester, major survey finds
Environment - Mar 24
Australia's environment is improving but climate change is 'accelerating' damage to ecosystems and wildlife
Australia's environment is improving but climate change is 'accelerating' damage to ecosystems and wildlife

Psychology - Mar 23
The grief myth: it doesn't come in stages or follow a checklist - like love, it endures
The grief myth: it doesn't come in stages or follow a checklist - like love, it endures
History & Archeology - Mar 23
The UV has played a part in the discovery of a 3,500-year-old loom that sheds light on key aspects of the Bronze Age textile revolution
The UV has played a part in the discovery of a 3,500-year-old loom that sheds light on key aspects of the Bronze Age textile revolution













