National Researcher's Profile Tool launched
The Researcher's Profile Tool is meant for all experts working in research. The Researcher's Profile Tool gives you a view of what kind of information about you and your research activities are stored in different databases and combine existing data to a national profile that remains under your control regardless of workplace and affiliation.
helps media, companies, publishers, financiers, law makers, decision makers and other interested in research and its results find experts in one place.
The version released after the beta version has been developed as follows:
- User interface functionality has been improved (e.g. hiding and republishing the profile)
- Data transfer from ORCID has been expanded (e.g. activities, research data and research projects)
- Updating the profile data has been developed (data changes from all sources are updated automatically, new data is not automatically published without consent)
Researchers can create a profile in by logging in with ORCID and identifying through Suomi.fi. For the profile, they can choose information from ORCID, their home organizations and Research.fi portal, which contains information e.g. on publications and research data. Researchers can decide on their own which information to publish and to which parties the information may be disclosed in the future.
- Open the
- Read more about the
, the service by the Ministry of Education and Culture and CSC, gives you single-source access to information on research in Finland. It contains information on the Finnish research system, publications of Finnish organizations, projects funded by public and private parties, statistical data on research personnel and funding as well as bibliometric information on publishing activities.
Further information
Research.fi and Researcher's Profile Tool
The National Research Information Hub and Research.fi portal offer a single source access to information on science and research in Finland.

Adding ORCID ID to your ACRIS profile
Distinguish yourself from every other researcher and add ORCID ID to your ACRIS profile.
Read more news

Five things: Origami unfolds in many ways
The word ori means ‘folded’ and kami means ‘paper’ in Japanese. Origami refers to both the traditional Japanese art of paper folding and to the object it produces. At Aalto University, this centuries-old technique finds applications across a variety of disciplines. Here are five examples:
Herd immunity may not work how we think
A new study from researchers at Aalto University suggests that our picture of herd immunity may be incomplete — and that understanding how people are connected could be just as important as knowing how many are immune.
Aalto computer scientists in ICML 2025
Department of Computer Science papers accepted to International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML)