ÄûÃʵ¼º½

News

Grants from the Finnish Cultural Foundation for science and art

A total of 37 individuals or groups from Aalto University received grants for science or art. The largest single grant was awarded to Professor Mikko Kurimo and his team for the revitalization and maintenance of the Sami language using artificial intelligence.
A person wearing a jacket made of clear plastic bags filled with brown fibrous material, seen from the side.

A total of 37 individuals or groups from Aalto University received grants for science or art from the Finnish Cultural Foundation. 

Support was provided, for example, for the research and maintenance of Finnish minority languages and cultures. One of the largest grants, 200,000 euros, was awarded to Professor Mikko Kurimo and his research group. Together, they are developing new resources and learning materials using artificial intelligence to revitalize and strengthen the use of the Sami language in various environments. The project involves close collaboration between experts in speech and language models, Sami language education and indigenous education as well as with Sami communities.

Screenwriter Marja-Riitta Koivumäki-Odd, who has worked as a researcher and teacher, among other things, received an Eminentia grant for her literary work on the history and current state of Finnish film screenwriting. Eminentia grants are intended for the dissemination of a lifetime of scientific or artistic work in written form.

Based on applications received in October 2024, the Finnish Cultural Foundation awarded a total of 29 million euros in grants for science, art and culture. The number of applications was a record 10,706. The share of arts out of the awarded amount in euros rose to 47 percent (compared to 43 percent in 2024).

For Aalto University grantees, the total sum of all grants amounts to over 1,1 million euros. The grantees come from all of the university's schools – explore below the fascinating topics of their research and artistic work!

Congratulations to all!

For the list of Aalto University grantees, please see the article in Finnish


Read more



(in Finnish, Finnish Cultural Foundation)


Photo: Aalto University, Mikko Raskinen

Kuva: Aalto-yliopisto, Mikko Raskinen

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Filmbot robot
Research & Art Published:

Researchers make micromanipulation more accessible

FilMBot aims to lower the barrier to high-precision work in education, research, and micro-assembly
Group of students at round tables talking and working on laptops in a bright office space
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Positive communication and improvisation help build students’ communication skills to meet employer needs

The School of Business redesigned its mandatory first-year communication course
Avner Peled's doctoral thesis presented in the Aalto ARTS 2025 annual review
Research & Art Published:

Learning Environments Research Group — 2025 in Review

2025 recap: three doctoral theses on context-aware interaction design, AI as creative learning partner, and telerobotic puppetry for peacebuilding.
Juha Gogulski, kuva: Matti Ahlgren, Aalto-yliopisto
Research & Art Published:

Juha Gogulski develops personalized brain stimulation therapy for depression

Aalto University postdoctoral researcher and Instrufoundation Fellow grant recipient Juha Gogulski is developing individualized brain stimulation treatments for patients with depression.