Department of Computer Science
We are an internationally-oriented community and home to world-class research in modern computer science.
Silja Sormunen has an interest in many things. So many in fact that she managed to study psychology, medicine, philosophy, comparative literature and aesthetics before her master鈥檚 studies at Aalto University.
鈥淭hrough my philosophy studies, I got more into mathematics and physics. This got me thinking that it might be interesting to study something more mathematical. After all, mathematics is a bridge between different disciplines,鈥 Sormunen says.
For her master鈥檚 studies, she wanted to find a programme where she could combine different interest areas while learning something new. She was browsing through master鈥檚 programmes at Aalto University when she came across the field of Complex Systems in the multidisciplinary programme. 鈥淚t felt like just the thing I had been looking for.鈥
Now Sormunen is in her second year of studies in the programme. The Life Science Technologies programme focuses on biomedical research, offering six different major subjects for students to choose from.
Sormunen鈥檚 major subject of focuses on complex networks and the studies also include network science, statistics, mathematics and programming. The objective of the studies is to provide students with a strong computational and theoretical understanding of how complex systems 鈥 say, e.g. the human brain or biological or social systems 鈥 work. The studies can either have a focus on the theory of systems or data science.
The understanding of complex systems acquired in the master鈥檚 studies can later be applied to several different fields, such as neuroscience and social networks. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 wonderful that the same tools can be used for very different projects. I am currently involved in a joint project on immunology together with the University of Helsinki鈥檚 Faculty of Medicine.鈥
heads research on Aalto鈥檚 side. Researchers are looking into how, for example, the T-cells necessary for the immune system are different in diabetics and in healthy controls as well as the types of processes through which T-cell receptors are produced in the thymus.
Silja SormunenEverything you study leaves you with an understanding and viewpoints that can be used in different ways.
Different minor subjects and voluntary studies can also be included in the master鈥檚 degree. Sormunen is studying a minor subject called at the Department of Mathematics and Systems Analysis.
Sormunen鈥檚 interest towards different things became apparent in school. She was particularly fond of mother tongue and writing, mathematics, languages and history. Then again, no subject really felt like a constraint, either. 鈥淚 enjoyed almost every subject and studied practically everything I could get my hands on.鈥 Music was an important hobby already as a child. 鈥淚 play the violin and piano and still do classical singing rather actively. I also read a lot.鈥
Sormunen鈥檚 parents have always encouraged and supported her to study what feels right for her. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure many others would have already applied some pressure on me to decide on what it is I want,鈥 Sormunen says and laughs.
鈥淓verything you study leaves you with an understanding and viewpoints that can be used in different ways.鈥
Sormunen has found it interesting to see the different ways in which questions of the brain, for example, are approached in the fields of psychology, philosophy, medicine, and network science. 鈥淒ifferent disciplines have very different ways of defining the types of questions that can and should be asked, and the answers that can be considered acceptable.鈥
Research was an area Sormunen found interesting already in upper secondary school. She is currently in the doctoral track programme, which combines master鈥檚 studies with doctoral studies.
In the programme, studies are tailored in such a way that they support doctoral studies. Students gain research experience as early as the first semester. 鈥淔irst, students become research assistants in different research groups. Gradually they start choosing their own topic and shaping it into a diploma thesis and doctoral thesis.鈥
In addition to Saram盲ki鈥檚 project, Sormunen has worked in Assistant Professor Mikko Kivel盲鈥檚 group where she researched human mobility and social networks with the help of Wi-Fi data.
Sormunen is planning to graduate as a Master of Science in Technology in 2020. She hopes to find herself as a postdoctoral researcher at the university in a few years. 鈥淚t has been a nice and safe, long-term task to work on my master鈥檚 and doctoral thesis at Aalto University. Previously, I have worked on so many things that the programme and location have been different almost every year.鈥
Sormunen鈥檚 favourite things at Aalto University include her pleasant research group and the green, harmonious campus area near the water. 鈥淲alking to the Laajalahti birdwatching tower is one of the things I enjoy doing.鈥
Education: BA in psychology (University of Helsinki), pre-clinical studies in medicine (Uppsala University), bachelor-level studies in philosophy completed except for thesis (University of Helsinki)
From Helsinki
Lives in Helsinki
Greatest study-related achievement: 鈥淚 have boldly tried a range of different subjects and been able to combine these different areas of interest.鈥
An interest in operas. 鈥淚 like Puccini, La Boh猫me in particular.鈥
A friendship with trees. 鈥淚 have always been very fond of trees. In different cities, I often look for a tree that I can climb and study on. In Uppsala, I had a certain tree for doing my homework assignments. I haven鈥檛 yet found a tree in Aalto鈥檚 surroundings, but I鈥檒l keep looking.鈥
Dreamt of being a bass singer, confectioner and farmer as a child. 鈥淎lthough all bass singers are men, I held on to this dream for a long time. Even before the age of ten, I was a fan of the great opera singer Jaakko Ryh盲nen. As a confectioner, I could have made some fine creations. Baking was an activity I enjoyed as a child, and still do. The farmer thing is a reflection of my desire to be out and about in nature. My grandparents grew up in the countryside and their stories have been passed on to me.鈥
English translation by Annika Rautakoura
We are an internationally-oriented community and home to world-class research in modern computer science.
The Master's Programme in Life Science Technologies educates a new generation of engineers, researchers and entrepreneurs who are committed to improving human health and wellbeing through development of innovative scientific and engineering solutions. The programme has a strong focus on the technological aspects of Life Sciences and is closely connected to the world-class research at Aalto University in the fields of biological data analysis and modelling, bioinformatics, bioelectronics and biosensing, biomedical engineering, human neuroscience and neurotechnology, biomaterials engineering and synthetic biology.