100 Works
Creating a Glass Lens - a Metaphor for Learning
Kirsti TaiviolaThe Pace of Learning – Combining Face-to-Face and Online Teaching in Architectural History
Anu Koponen & Sari KivimäkiArt-based Research of Consumer Culture
Anastasia Seregina & Oskar ChristenssonViolence and the Other in Contemporary Art: A Question of Ethics for Art Education
Kevin Tavin & Mira Kallio-TavinThe Lacanian Real in Lars von Trier's Antichrist
Henriikka Huunan-SeppäläColour Flow & Colour Collage
Barbara JansenExperimental sites and encounters: Open formats as catalysts for the renewal of ethnographic arts
Eeva Berglund & Tomás S. CriadoMonet and me - The story of an inspiration
Hanna-Kaisa KorolainenArt of Research VII: Authorship and Responsibility
Harri Laakso, Sofia Pantouvaki & Julia Valle-NoronhaDissolving orphan collections in the commons
Marina Valle NoronhaIntervention
Gian Luigi BiaginiIntroduction
Camilla Groth, Maarit Mäkelä, Harri Laakso & Susanna HelkeUnfolding the Unexpressed: The Grotesque, Norms and Repressions
Henriikka Huunan-SeppäläData from: How close do we live to water? a global analysis of population distance to freshwater bodies
Matti Kummu, Hans De Moel, Philip J. Ward & Olli Varis
Traditionally, people have inhabited places with ready access to fresh water. Today, over 50% of the global population lives in urban areas, and water can be directed via tens of kilometres of pipelines. Still, however, a large part of the world's population is directly dependent on access to natural freshwater sources. So how are inhabited places related to the location of freshwater bodies today? We present a high-resolution global analysis of how close present-day populations...
Data from: Interacting networks of resistance, virulence and core machinery genes identified by genome-wide epistasis analysis
Marcin J. Skwark, Nicholas J. Croucher, Santeri Puranen, Claire Chewapreecha, Maiju Pesonen, Ying Ying Xu, Paul Turner, Simon R. Harris, Stephen B. Beres, James M. Musser, Julian Parkhill, Stephen D. Bentley, Erik Aurell & Jukka Corander
Recent advances in the scale and diversity of population genomic datasets for bacteria now provide the potential for genome-wide patterns of co-evolution to be studied at the resolution of individual bases. Here we describe a new statistical method, genomeDCA, which uses recent advances in computational structural biology to identify the polymorphic loci under the strongest co-evolutionary pressures. We apply genomeDCA to two large population data sets representing the major human pathogens Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) and...