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Institution

University of Lapland

EducationRovaniemi, Finland
About: University of Lapland is a education organization based out in Rovaniemi, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Arctic & Context (language use). The organization has 665 authors who have published 1870 publications receiving 39129 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Rovaniemi & Lapin yliopisto.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the determinants of international overnight stays to Finnish Lapland in the early winter season were investigated based on major winter destinations for the period 1996-2014 and the data were based on the period 2014-2015.
Abstract: This paper investigates the determinants of international overnight stays to Finnish Lapland in the early winter season. The data are based on major winter destinations for the period 1996–2014 and...

15 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Sep 2014
TL;DR: This work-in-progress research exploring the concept of mixed reality user interfaces for cars, focusing on passenger use cases, communication and social nature of the use, presents motivation and an early prototype of the concept.
Abstract: Due to their large window surfaces and mobile use, cars offer an interesting domain for mixed reality applications. By utilizing the windows as see-through displays, there is a possibility to enhance the physical landscape with location-specific information. In this paper we describe our work-in-progress research exploring the concept of mixed reality user interfaces for cars, focusing on passenger use cases, communication and social nature of the use. In this workshop paper, we present our motivation and an early prototype of the concept.

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the statistical relationship between the summer sea ice melt rate and the mean sea level pressure (SLP) trend with an increase over the Arctic Ocean and a decrease over Siberia is investigated.
Abstract: Observations from 1979 to 2014 show a positive trend in the summer sea ice melt rate with an acceleration particularly in June and August. This is associated with atmospheric circulation changes such as a tendency toward a dipole pattern in the mean sea level pressure (SLP) trend with an increase over the Arctic Ocean and a decrease over Siberia. Consistent with previous studies, we here show the statistical relationship between the summer sea ice melt rate and SLP and that more than one SLP pattern is associated with anomalously high melt rates. Most high melt rates occur during high pressure over the Arctic Ocean accompanied by low pressure over Siberia, but a strong Beaufort High and advection of warm air associated with a cyclone located over the Taymyr Peninsula can also trigger anomalous high ice melt. We evaluate 10‐member ensemble simulations with the coupled atmosphere‐ice‐ocean Arctic regional climate model HIRHAM‐NAOSIM. The simulations have systematically low acceleration of sea ice melt rate in August, related to shortcomings in representing the strengthening pressure gradient from the Barents/Kara Sea toward Northern Greenland in recent decades. In general, the model shows the same classification of SLP patterns related to anomalous melt rates as the observations. However, the evolution of sea ice melt‐related cloud‐radiation feedback over the summer reveals contrary effects from low‐level clouds in the reanalysis and in the simulations.

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article explored how two heavy metal subgenres, black metal and Viking metal, approach and utilise narratives associated with the "north" and the "rage" of the Northman.
Abstract: For centuries the Arctic has served as a stage of imagination and has inspired countless artists in different ways. Also the music genre of heavy metal frequently utilises the ‘north’ and the Arctic. This paper briefly explores how two heavy metal subgenres, black metal and Viking metal, approach and utilise narratives associated with the ‘north’. By using lyrics of black and Viking metal bands, different forms of utilisation come to the fore, ranging from narratives of death to the raging Northman. Also polar exploration finds musical expression and is a source for generating extreme conceptual settings.

14 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
02 May 2019
TL;DR: The effects of mobile technology to couples' bed-sharing practices through in-depth interviews and an online survey and the perceived effects on couples' verbal and physical interaction and the intimacy of the bed are investigated.
Abstract: In this paper, we investigate the use of mobile technology in an underexplored context, the bed that couples share. Despite large amounts of research on the impact of pre-bedtime technology use on our sleep and mental state, scant research in the HCI field focuses on the physical bed as a negotiated site of technology use by couples. This paper explores (a) the meaning of the bed accessed by mobile technology and (b) the strategies of both individual and shared technology use in bed, in the context of couple's relationships. We investigate the effects of mobile technology to couples' bed-sharing practices through in-depth interviews (n = 12) and an online survey (n = 117). We report on creative and negotiated bodily practices of mobile technology use by couples in bed, and the perceived effects on couples' verbal and physical interaction and the intimacy of the bed.

14 citations


Authors

Showing all 710 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Hong Li10377942675
John C. Moore7638925542
Jeffrey M. Welker5717918135
Bruce C. Forbes431307984
Mats A. Granskog411415023
Manfred A. Lange38924256
Liisa Tyrväinen371126649
Samuli Helama351564008
Aslak Grinsted34899653
Jukka Jokimäki31934175
Sari Stark29582559
Elina Lahelma27862217
Jonna Häkkilä25972185
Rupert Gladstone23512320
Justus J. Randolph23662160
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202318
202261
2021158
2020157
2019172
2018128