The Yes camp are gaining but are still falling short of a lead in two of the final indyref polls before Thursday.

An ICM/Scotsman poll found Yes on 41% (+3) while No were on 45% (-2). The remainder of those sampled either wouldn't reveal voting intentions or said they didn't know.

When that group are factored out, the headline figure is No 52% to Yes 48%, broadly in line with the average outcome of a series of polls done at the weekend.

Tonight's ICM poll had an online sample of 1,175 Scots aged 16+, interviewed September 12-16.

The 52-48 headline lead for No is echoed in a second poll, done by Opinium for the Daily Telegraph.

It found 43% said they would definitely vote Yes, compared to 47% for No% and around 9% in the Don't Know/Won't Vote camp.

Opinium also asked a series of detailed questions:

* 58% of women will vote No, against 42% for Yes. By contrast, 53% of men will vote Yes.

* half of all voters believe the referendum has caused deep divisions in Scotland, and damaged ties with the rest of the UK.

* Alex Salmond is the most trusted politician in the debate, especially compared to Westminster figures, but 44% think he should resign as First Minister if there's a No vote.

Opinium carried out the  online survey of 1,156 adults in Scotland aged 16+ from September 12-15.

And the 52-48 headline No-Yes split also emerged in a Survation poll for the Daily Mail, where the total division was Yes 44%, No 48%, Don't Know 8%.