柠檬导航

News

Data analytic methods being used to study Finnish parliamentary data and Finnish films

Projects funded by the Academy of Finland will study political and film data from 1907 onwards.
Eduskunta koolla VPK:n talossa 1907.
The parliament in 1907.

The new Digital Humanities projects funded by the Academy of Finland will be launched in January 2020. One Aalto University project will examine parliamentary politics and political culture, the other will analyse Finnish films.

The ParliamentSampo

The project, named Semantic Parliament or ParliamentSampo, is led by Director of the Helsinki Centre for Digital Humanities (HELDIG) Eero Hyv枚nen at the University of Helsinki who is also professor at Aalto University. Staff Scientist Jouni Tuominen is in charge of Aalto鈥檚 part of the project.

鈥榃e are studying the use of political language, networks, and activities of parliamentary representatives using semantic computing and Artificial Intelligence methods. Different themes can be sought from the parliamentary debates, such as the handling of climate change among different parties and Members of Parliament. We can also examine whether Members of Parliament speak in the same way in the Parliament chamber as they do in the social media, or how the parliamentary debates are visible in the media,鈥 says Jouni Tuominen.

The aim of the project is to improve the usability of the huge open data sets of the Parliament of Finland from 1907 onwards. The ParliamentSampo will be a new member in the widely used Finnish 鈥楽ampo鈥 series of Linked Data portals, such as CultureSampo, BookSampo, WarSampo, BiographySampo, and NameSampo, which have had millions of users in Finland.

鈥楾he ParliamentSampo data will be interlinked with Finnish legislation and case law published by the forth-coming LawSampo system, and it also utilises the BiographySampo's biographical knowledge graph to study the activities and networks of Members of Parliament,鈥 says Eero Hyv枚nen.

Aalto is responsible for modelling and publishing the linked data of the project and for developing user interfaces and data-analytic tools. The HELDIG Centre is responsible especially for the required language technology, analysis, and legal data, and the special expertise of the Centre for Parliamentary Studies at the University of Turku is in political culture.

鈥楾he project will make Finnish parliamentary data more accessible to researchers, journalists, application developers, and ordinary citizens. The data will be enriched by linking it to other resources, for example to LawSampo, which is being developed together with the Ministry of Justice in a separate project,鈥 Tuominen adds.

A country shaped by films

The second project is a joint project between Aalto University and the University of Turku. The goal is to examine and analyse Finnish fictional films and long documentary films produced between 1907 and 2017. The total number of such films is approximately 1500. The project combines speech and image recognition with language technology to carry out cinematic historical research.

鈥榃e use language technology to convert the spoken content into text. Not only the recording technology, but also the language used in old films is different than today and this makes automatic speech recognition in this project particularly challenging,鈥 says Professor Mikko Kurimo.

The University of Turku, which is leading the project, will collect the film data and  the speech recognition research takes place at Aalto University. The large amount of automatic transcripts will provide unique means for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of how the films reflect societal change and modernisation.

鈥楾he subject of the research may be, for example, an outdoor discussion with background traffic noise.鈥

Senior University Lecturer Jorma Laaksonen is responsible for the media and image analysis of the films.

鈥楾he different areas of the project complement each other. We are searching for visual items that describe the content of the films and the changes taking place in the world over the decades.鈥

The project involves close cooperation with the National Audiovisual Institute.

Jorma Laaksonen

Jorma Laaksonen

Senior University Lecturer
T313 Dept. Computer Science
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Close-up of a complex scientific instrument with golden components and various wires, in a laboratory setting.
Press releases Published:

Time crystals could power future quantum computers

A time crystal, a long-life quantum system approaching perpetual motion, has been hooked up to its environment for the first time, unlocking an intriguing way to increase quantum computational and sensing power.
A person in black touches a large stone sculpture outside a brick building under a blue sky.
Campus, Research & Art, University Published:

Glitch artwork challenges to see art in a different light

Laura K枚n枚nen's sculpture was unveiled on 14 October at the Otaniemi campus.
Book cover of 'Nanoparticles Integrated Functional Textiles' edited by Md. Reazuddin Repon, Daiva Miku膷ioniene, and Aminoddin Haji.
Research & Art Published:

Nanoparticles in Functional Textiles

Dr. Md. Reazuddin Repon, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Textile Chemistry Group, Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems, Aalto University, has contributed as an editor to a newly published academic volume titled 鈥淣anoparticles Integrated Functional Textiles鈥.
Person standing outdoors in autumn, wearing a grey hoodie and green jacket. Trees in the background with orange leaves.
Appointments Published:

Introducing Qi Chen: Trustworthy AI requires algorithms that can handle unexpected situations

AI developers must focus on safer and fairer AI methods, as the trust and equality of societies are at stake, says new ELLIS Institute Finland principal investigator Qi Chen