Activities include research, publications, academic events, teaching, consultations, training and supervision, but also extra-academic projects focused on social progress and sustainability.
ISI was born in 1988 in Imatra, Finland, on initiative of the Toronto Semiotic Circle.
The institute was created in order to promote international teaching of semiotics and to facilitate the mobility of students in the field.
ISI served as the meeting place for nearly one hundred events, ranging from seminars to summer congresses, plus periodical or occasional meetings of organizations like the Finnish Society of Semiotics, the Musical Signification Project, the International Association for Semiotic Studies and other Nordic and Finno-Ugrian associations.
[1] In 1992, Acta Semiotica Fennica, the first ISI book series, started its regular publication of international monographs and anthologies.