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ISA highlights position of Indian semicon research

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CIOL Bureau
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NEW DELHI, INDIA: The India Semiconductor Association (ISA) has released, “A study on the status of semiconductor related research in Indian universities,” a study by Evalueserve.

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The study addresses the state of semiconductor related research in top Indian technical universities. It is supported by Intel Education along with the Ministry of Communication and Information Technology (MCIT). The study was released by Jainder Singh, IAS, Secretary MCIT at New Delhi.

The report is aimed at highlighting the role that academia will play in the growth and development of the Indian semiconductor industry and advices on a future course of action for building university labs and related research.

Summary of key findings:

* The role of government funding is 85-90 percent of the funding available to university lab research.

* The top seven institutes account for approximately 70–75 percent of the total research being undertaken in the academic institutes of the country. These institutes have
the faculty and dedicated VLSI labs to support high-quality semiconductor-related research.

* These institutes account for around 61 percent of research papers published in the field of semiconductors.

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Recommendations:

* Facilitate a public-private partnership (PPP) model involving the government, the industry, and the academia to encourage applied semiconductor research.

* Promote setting up of Technology Business Incubators (TBI). TBIs provide a robust platform for active industry-academia interactions, and help convert a potential research
idea to its commercial success.

* Take steps to enhance research infrastructure by developing dedicated research centers, by enhancing the standard of semiconductor laboratories to match with industry
standards and by setting up semiconductor-related research in R&D special economic zones.

* Improve the status of research scholars and faculty by providing performance based incentives to faculty and research scholars, facilitating involvement of industry
executives in academics and by creating awareness about job avenues among PhD holders.

* Industry to participate in a proactive manner more than just providing tools.

Ms. Poornima Shenoy, President ISA, said: “The design capacity of semiconductor companies in India resides with the capability to source quality talent and focus on cutting edge research out of our university labs. This exercise is the first complete documentation of such existing work. It will provide an excellent database from which both industry involvement and government support can grow."

Rahul Bedi, Director, Corporate Affairs South Asia, Intel India, added: “I am very excited to see this concise research as I’m sure this will enable the industry to focus with clear direction and vision on furthering effective partnerships with Indian universities and helping build our innovation capacity, together."

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