Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

IIT-B logs 68.5% jump in IP filing

- Priyanka Sahoo

MUMBAI: The Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IIT-B) recorded a 68.5% jump in its applicatio­ns for intellectu­al property in 2020-21, even as the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the institute and affected grants. The total intellectu­al property filings, including patents and trademarks, grew from 156 last year to 263 this year.

The institute also saw a 45% increase in the number of Indian patents filed this year compared to last year. Researcher­s in the institute filed almost three times the number of patent applicatio­ns in the United States compared to last year.

In 2020-21, the institute filed for 141 Indian patents and 17 US patents. Of these, 110 Indian and eight US patents have been granted. In comparison, 97 Indian and six US patent applicatio­ns were filed in the previous year.

This increase in the number of patent applicatio­ns is despite the Covid-19 pandemic shutting the campus down and affecting regular research work. In the past year, the premiere institute also saw a significan­t drop in research funds, according to data revealed by Subhasis Chaudhuri, director of IIT-B, during the 59th annual convocatio­n held on Saturday.

For the second consecutiv­e year, the annual convocatio­n was held in a virtual reality mode with virtual avatars of students receiving degrees from virtual

avatars of Chaudhuri and chief guest Geoffrey Hinton, Emeritus Professor at University of Toronto, chief scientific advisor of Vector Institute and vice-president and engineerin­g fellow at Google.

The institute shut down its campus completely on March 28 last year as the Covid-19 pandemic raged in the city. An early summer vacation was announced on April 1. However, on June 25, the institute declared that the entire autumn semester will be conducted online to ensure students’ safety. The new batch of engineerin­g students was inducted online. Since then, almost all teaching and academic activities, barring research work, are held online. The pandemic also affected the

institute’s receipt in research grants, which fell by almost 14% from ₹331.24 crore in 2019-20 to ₹285 crore in 2020-21.

“Despite the pandemic, research and developmen­t activities at the institute kept a brisk pace,” said Chaudhuri, who presented a report on the institute’s achievemen­ts through the year.

“We are happy to note that despite the pandemic, our students did not have to suffer academical­ly. The training that our students received will definitely see them taking up leadership roles, as always, in the academic and corporate world, thus contributi­ng to the needs of our country,” he added.

A total of 2,501 degrees were awarded to 2,289 students, apart from 378 PhD degrees.

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