Documents
Documents
Documents
Minutes of the 88th Anniversary General Meeting of the Indian National Science
Academy held on 14-16 December, 2022 at Andhra University and IIPE,
Visakhapatnam.
In 88th Anniversary General Meeting (14-16 December 2022) the following activities:
Presidential address, one public lecture, two award lectures and INSA Anniversary
lectures were organized :
14 December, 2022
2
Anniversary Lectures (14-16 December, 2022)
SESSION 1
Sectional Committee I:
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
(i) Geometrical Singularities in the Model of Hard Rigid Rotors on a Lattice by Prof.
Deepak Dhar FNA, IISER, Pune
(ii) Thermonuclear Supernovae as Cosmological Probes by Prof. G.C. Anupama FNA,
IIA, Bengaluru
SESSION 4
SESSION 5
3
(i) Design and Development of Heterogeneous Catalysts for Sustainable Chemical
Industry by Prof. M Lakshmi Kantam, FNA, ICT, Mumbai
(ii) Molecules to Materials by De Novo Design by Prof. JN Moorthy FNA, IISER,
Thiruvananthapuram
SESSION 6
CHAIR: Prof. NR Jagannathan FNA, Sri Ramachandra Inst. of Higher Education and
Research, Chennai
(i) Preclinical Studies with Ayurvedic Drugs to Predict their Efficacy Against COVID-19
Pathologies by Dr. Madhu Dikshit FNA, CDRI, Lucknow
(ii) Multi-disciplinary Approach to Understand Complex Diseases with Public Health
Significance by Dr. Shinjini Bhatnagar FNA, THSTI, Faridabad
SESSION 7
(i) Advent of Plate Tectonics and the Supercontinent Cycle-selected Indian Examples
by Prof. Somnath Dasgupta FNA, ISI, Kolkata
(ii) A Narrative of Mathematization of Earth System Science by Prof. RN Singh FNA,
IIT, Gandhinagar
SESSION 8
(i) Gut Instincts and Gut Reactions: Molecular Mechanisms Underlying the Biology by
Prof. Sandhya S. Visweswariah, FNA IISc, Bengaluru
(ii) Of Genomes, Methylomes & Acetylomes by Prof. DN Rao FNA, IISc, Bengaluru
SESSION 9
Sectional Committee V:
SESSION 10
4
Sectional Committee X:
Award Lectures
Homi Jehangir Bhabha Medal Lecture (2020) on The Fascinating Physics of Strongly
Correlated Quantum Impurities by Prof. HR Krishnamurthy, FNA, IISc, Bengaluru
Summary of the lectures and brief profile of the speakers are attached at Annexure-
III, p/ 42-44.
INSA Website
A new format of the INSA Website has been launched by Professor Chandrima
Shaha, President, INSA during the Anniversary General Meeting on 15 December,
2022.
“Jiddi - The Zealous Ones” authored by Prof. Sulabha K Kulkarni, FNA, CMET, Pune
was released by Dr Madhu Dikshit, FNA
Public Lecture
Lecture on The Future of Our Universe by Prof. Ashoke Sen, FNA, ICTS, Bengaluru
Summary of the lecture and brief profile of the speaker is attached at Annexure-V, p/
47.
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Anniversary General Meeting
The minutes of the Annual General Meeting held on 17 October, 2022 were
presented by Professor Gaiti Hasan, Vice-President, INSA. These minutes
were already uploaded on INSA website. No comments were received.
Thereafter, the minutes were confirmed.
3. To read as required under Rule 40(c) the name of nominees for election
as INSA Fellow from 1 October, 2022 to 7 December, 2022.
Professor Chandrima Shaha, President INSA presented scroll/ lapel pin / stole to the
52 Fellows (those who were inducted virtually in the previous meeting) w.e.f. 1.1.2023
and inducted to the Fellowship took the oath, signed the Fellowship register. The list is
given at Annexure-V, 48-50. In addition, Professor SR Athreya and Professor EP
Ghate handed over the scroll, lapel pin and tie.
35 Young Scientists (14 from 2021 and 21 from 2020) received the INSA Medal for
Young Scientist Award from President, INSA. In addition, 25 Teachers Awardees (12
from 2021 and 13 from 2020) received the INSA Teachers Award from President,
INSA. The list is given at Annexure-VI, p/ 51-52.
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Modification in Rule 21
President, INSA informed the Fellows present about the changes in Rule for
Cessation of Fellowship.
After detailed discussion in the Council, it was decided that the proposed Rule will be
modified as follows:
CESSATION OF FELLOWSHIP
………….
21. If any Fellow of the Academy shall willfully disobey Rules or Orders of the
Academy or Council, or shall commit a willful breach of order at any of the General
Meetings, or having unwittingly committed, shall persist in any disobedience or breach
of order, after being admonished by the President, or if for any other reasons e.g.
violation of academic ethics such as data falsification, plagiarism, financial
irregularities and proven cases of harassment, it shall appear to the Council that
the name of a Fellow should not remain on the rolls, he/she shall be liable to be
removed from the Academy. Whenever there shall appear cause as aforesaid, for the
removal of a Fellow from the Academy, if a majority of the Council shall, after due
deliberation determine by ballot, to propose to the Academy the removal of the
said Fellow, the President shall, at any General Meeting of the Academy, announce
from the Chair such determination of the Council, and at the next meeting after that at
which the said announcement has been made, the proposition shall be submitted to
ballot. If three-fourth of the Fellows present and voting at such General Meeting vote
for the removal of such Fellow, he/she shall be removed from the Academy.
…………….
The above modified Rule will be sent for voting to all Fellows.
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5 b. Presentation of memento to outgoing President, Professor Chandrima
Shaha.
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Annexure-I
14 DECEMBER 2022 09:30-10:30
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PRESIDENTIAL LECTURE
CHANDRIMA SHAHA
President, Indian National Science Academy
Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg, New Delhi
Email: [email protected]
The history of the fight against infectious diseases is remarkable with scientists
meaningfully contributing to treatment and survival. Fundamental contributions by
Jenner and Pasteur led to the formulation of vaccines that helped brunt the effects of
many diseases. The most successfully eliminated contagion is the smallpox eradicated
primarily through vaccination. The knowledge of viruses and other infectious pathogens
should not blind a medical researcher to ecological and immunological insights that
influences the biology of a pathogen and collective knowledge will help in effectively
dealing with a pandemic. While it is not possible to predict if the next pandemic will be
caused by something similar to the corona virus or something else, better surveillance
systems are the ways to detect to build improved medical interventions before an
outbreak goes out of control. As evident from the recent pandemic, even after such huge
advances in science and technologies, we shall always face contagions and will have to
be prepared. The structure of the systems and linkages in which we live will control how
well we shall fare in future.
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Speaker Profile MY
Prof. Chandrima Shaha is a biologist, President of the Indian National Science Academy and JC
Bose Chair Distinguished Professor of the National Academy of Sciences at the Indian Institute
of Chemical Biology at Kolkata. She is also the Former Director of the National Institute of
Immunology, New Delhi. Her research interests center around elucidating the processes that
influence cell death programs under varying physiological conditions in diverse organisms. She
is an elected fellow of the World Academy of Sciences and fellow of all three Science Academies of
India. She served as Vice-President of International Affairs of the Indian National Science Academy
and as a member in the Councils of all three National Academies. Notable awards include the
Ranbaxy Science Foundation Award for basic sciences; the J.C. Bose Fellowship; Shanti Swarup
Bhatnagar Medal of INSA; Om Prakash Bhasin Award; Archana Sharma Memorial Award;
Darshan Ranganathan Memorial Award; Chandrakala Hora Memorial Medal and the Shakuntala
Amir Chand Prize.
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Annexure-II
14 DECEMBER 2022 11:00-11:45
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-I
EKNATH P. GHATE
Professor of Mathematics
TIFR, Mumbai
Email: [email protected]
Galois Representations
Galois representations have become fundamental tools with which to study problems
in Number Theory. We shall give an overview of our work on the explicit shape of the
reductions of local Galois representations.
Speaker Profile
Eknath Ghate is a Professor of Mathematics specializing in Number Theory. He is mainly interested
in studying various number theoretic objects such as modular forms, Galois representations and
L-functions from a p-adic perspective. He received the Bhatnagar Award in 2013. He was elected
as a Fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences in 2014 and the Indian National Science Academy
in 2021.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-I
SIVA R. ATHREYA
Professor
ISI, Bengaluru
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Siva Athreya is a Professor at the Indian Statistical Institute and International Centre for Theoretical
Sciences, TIFR. His primary field of interest is probability theory. He has worked on models
arising from statistical physics and population biology, particularly Stochastic partial differential
equations, Diffusions on tree like networks, Random Graphs and related topics. He got his PhD
in Mathematics from the University of Washington, Seattle, in 1998 and has been at the Indian
Statistical Institute since 2001. He was awarded the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize for Science
and Technology in 2012. He is the chief editor of the Electronic Communications in Probability. He
has coauthored a recent book “Measure and Probability” and is the coauthor of a for thcoming book
“Probability and Statistics with Examples using R”.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-VI
MEWA SINGH
SERB Distinguished Fellow and Distinguished Professor
University of Mysore, Mysore
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Mewa Singh obtained his Master’s degree at Panjab University, Chandigarh, Ph.D. at University
of Mysore, and training in Wildlife Management at Smithsonian Institution Washington DC. His
research on ecology and behavior of wild mammals, especially of non-human primates, is field based.
He has worked in the forests of Himalayas, Western Ghats, Eastern Ghats, and Nicobar Islands.
He is an elected Fellow of the three science academies of India, and winner of Sundar Lal Hora
Medal of INSA. He is a former Ramanna and J.C. Bose Fllow of DST/SERB, and presently, he is
SERB Distinguished fellow at University of Mysore. In his honor for research in biological sciences,
a recently discovered new species of a frog from the Western Ghats of India has been named as
“Nyctibatrachus mewasinghii” or Mewa Singh’s Night Frog. In recognition of his contributions,
the University of Mysore has appointed him Distinguished Professor (for life).
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-VI
QUDSIA TAHSEEN
Professor of Zoology
Department of Zoology, Aligarh Muslim University
Aligarh
Email: [email protected]
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Research Specialization
Nematology, Taxonomy, biodiversity, developmental biology, ecology of soil and freshwater
nematodes.
National Honours
Fellow of the three National Science Academies. INSA Young Scientist Medal (1995),
Reputed labs of Europe (England, Scotland, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, France etc.), Chinese
Academy of Sciences and the University of California, Ohio State University, and New York
University visited for collaborative research.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-II
DEEPAK DHAR
Distinguished Emeritus Professor
IISER, Pune
I will consider a simple model of these materials, where rigid nonspherical molecules
are pivoted to the sites of a regular lattice, but can take arbitrary orientations, subject to
the hard core constraint. I will show that this model shows multiple geometrical phase
transitions, where the entropy per molecule is a singular function of the ratio of size of
the molecules to the spacing between sites. In many cases, the position and nature of
singularities in distribution of orientations can be determined exactly.
Speaker Profile
Deepak Dhar (b. 1951) obtained his M.Sc. Degree in Physics from I.I.T. Kanpur (1972), and Ph.D.
from Caltech (1978). He was at the T.I.F.R., Mumbai (1978-2016), and is currently Distinguished
Emeritus Professor and NASI Senior Scientist at IISER, Pune. He is known for his work in
statistical physicson models of percolation, self-organized criticality, and slow relaxation. He has
been awarded the S.S.B. Prize in Physics (1996), S.N. Bose medal of INSA, TWAS prize and the
Boltzmann medal(2022).
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G.C. ANUPAMA
Visiting Professor
IIA, Bengaluru
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
G.C. Anupama is an observational astronomer with expertise in the area of time domain astronomy.
Currently a Visiting Professor at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics, she retired as a Senior
Professor at IIA in 2021. She was the former Dean and also Professor in-Charge of the Indian
Astronomical Observatory at IIA. She also held the office of the President of Astronomical Society of
India during 2019-2022, with the distinction of being the first woman president of the ASI. She is a
Fellow of the NASI and IAS, and also a recipient of the Govt. of Karnataka’s Sir C.V. Raman Young
Scientist Award in Space Sciences for the Year 2001.
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SUBEER S. MAJUMDAR
Director General
Gujarat Biotechnology University, Gandhinagar
Email: [email protected]
Domesticated and wild animals have evolved along with human and deserve to be
respected equally well. Since livelihood of many depend on animals, it is necessary
to address issues related to animal health as eagerly as we do for human. With this
philosophy, scientific investigations based on modern tools can be undertaken to benefit
animals and human both. We have developed few techniques and tools in line with this
principal. With the advent of high throughput tools of next generation sequencing (NGS),
we are rapidly discovering many new genes based on their sequences, however pace
with which their roles in disease biology or productivity is established is less. To study
initiation and progression of a disease, involving a gene, now we can make transgenic
animals. We have generated a new deathless method for generating transgenic animals
using short cut testicular route, which avoids a cumbersome procedure based on embryo
manipulation and assisted reproductive techniques. This not only saves animal lives
but also opens a scope to generate strong herds of livestock with disease resistance and
heat tolerance. Exogenous supplementation of proteins in ailing persons (diseases like
cancer, arthritis, osteoporosis etc.) is routinely practiced in clinical set up. However, their
exorbitant cost associated with in vitro production and required industrial setup, reduce
their access to the masses. Creation of transgenic farm animals which can be used to
generate human proteins in their milk (udder gland only) by using genetic engineering is
the only alternative to reduce the cost and increase the affordability. Unfortunately, issues
related to Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) restrict such avenues. To this end, we
have developed a technique where the udder glands of animals are directly transfected
with the construct containing genes for expressing human or animal proteins for their
therapeutic use, avoiding creation of GMO. We have recently developed the first SNP chip
for Indian cows named ‘IndiGau’ with an intent to identify and conserve native breeds
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of cows which have many important traits and which are threatened due to interbreed
insemination. The same chip may be used for enhancing the milk yield in future.
Speaker Profile
Dr. Subeer S. Majumdar was the Director of National Institute of Animal Biotechnology, until
recently and now is the Director General, Gujarat Biotechnology University, Gandhinagar. He
has generated a new technique of transgenesis, called as testicular transgenesis which can quickly
generate humanized models of diseases, for testing vaccines and therapeutics and opens up avenues
for easy, large animal (livestock) transgenesis.
Indian variety of cows have great qualities of heat resistance, disease resistance, draught resistance,
stabilized during million years in India is getting lost due to random artificial insemination using
imported semen. A high density SNP chip is developed using Next generation sequencing (NGS)
of 43 Indian breeds of cows at NIAB. The chip is currently under validation for conservation of
indigenous breeds of cow which have many good qualities including, resistance to certain diseases.
He is fellow of all three science academies and recipient of TATA innovation and J.C. Bose fellowships.
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SUBHADEEP CHATTERJEE
Staff Scientist-VI (Group Leader)
CDFD, Hyderabad
Speaker Profile
Dr. Subhadeep Chatterjee’s laboratory at Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics has
discovered reversible non-genetic heterogeneity in bacterial social communication systems that
coordinate virulence and lifestyle transitions during plant disease. The fundamental findings have
implications for bacterial disease management, including those of medical importance, and they
give key insights on microbial evolution.
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M. LAKSHMI KANTAM
Dr. B.P. Godrej Distinguished Professor in Green Chemistry and
Sustainable Engineering
Department of Chemical Engineering
Institute of Chemical Technology
Matunga, Mumbai
Speaker Profile
Professor Lakshmi Kantam was born in 1955 in Tenali, Andhra Pradesh, India. She received M.Sc.
and Ph.D. degrees from Kurukshetra University, Haryana, India. After completing her Ph.D. at
Kurukshetra, she worked as a lecturer for one year at JMJ College, Tenali, where she did her graduate
studies. In 1984, she joined as a Scientist in Regional Research Laboratory, Hyderabad, now CSIR-
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (CSIR-IICT), and later became the Director of CSIR-
IICT in April 2013. In 2015, she served as Professor at Tezpur University, Assam, and at present,
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she is Dr. B.P. Godrej Distinguished Professor in Green Chemistry and Sustainable Engineering,
at Department of Chemical Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai. She has 38
years of experience designing and developing catalysts for the chemical industry’s innovative green
and economic processes. She has authored more than 350+ publications, 42 patents, and six book
chapters. She is an Adjunct Professor at Tezpur Central University, Tezpur, Assam, and a Conjoint
Professor at The University of Newcastle, Australia. She is a fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry
(FRSC), The World Academy of Sciences (FTWAS), Indian National Science Academy (FNA), and
National Academy of Sciences (FNASc). She is in the Board of many companies, Vinati Organics
Limited, Godavari Biorefineries Limited, Prasol Chemicals Limited, and Indo Amines Limited.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-III
I will present some results of our research in the last few years on how one may control
molecular reactivity and develop functional materials in a bottom-up fashion. I will
exemplify rational molecular design for the development of organic functional materials,
namely, photochromic materials,1 organic light-emitting diodes,2 and porous materials
(metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and porous organic polymers (POPs)).3
References
1. Moorthy, J. N.; Mandal, S.; Mukhopadhyay, A.; Samanta, S. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 6872; b)
Mukhopadhyay, A.; Maka, V.; Moorthy, J. N. Photochem. Photobiol. Rev. C. 2016, 29, 73; c) A. Muk-
hopadhyay, V. Maka, G. Savitha, J. N. Moorthy, Chem (Cell Press), 2018, 4, 1069.
2. Jhulki, S.; Seth, S.; Ghosh, A.; Chow, T. J.; Moorthy, J. N. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 2016,
8, 1527-1535. (b) Jhulki, S.; Moorthy, J. N. J. Mater. Chem. C 2018, 6 (31), 8280-8325.
3. P. Chandrasekhar, A. Mukhopadhyay, G. Savitha, J. N. Moorthy, Chem. Sci. 2016, 07, 3085. b) P.
Chandrasekhar, A. Mukhopadhyay, G. Savitha, J. N. Moorthy, J. Mater. Chem. A. 2017, 5, 5402.
c) A. Mukhopadhyay, V. Maka, G. Savitha, J. N. Moorthy, Chem (Cell Press), 2018, 4, 1069. d) V.
Maka, A. Mukhopadhyay, Moorthy, J. N. Nanoscale, 2018, 10, 22389. e) V. Maka, A. , J. N. Moorthy,
Chem. Eur. J. 2019, 25, 3835. f) Maka, V. K.; Tamuly, P.; Jindal, S.; Moorthy, J. N. App. Mater. Today
2020, 19, 100613. g) Yadav, C.; Maka, V. K.; Payra, S.; Moorthy, J. N. J. Catal. 2020, 384, 61. h) Jindal,
S.; Maka, V.K.; Anjum, G.; Moorthy, J. N. ACS Applied Nano Materials 2021, 04, 449. i) Tamuly, P.;
Sama, F.; Moorthy, J. N. Adv. Mater. Interfaces 2022, 2200337. J) Yadav, C.; Payra, S.; Moorthy, J. N.
J. Catal. 2022, 414, 769
Speaker Profile
Dr. J. N. Moorthy obtained Ph.D degree from the Organic Chemistry Department of Indian
Institute of Science, Bangalore in 1994. He pursued postdoctoral research in University of Houston,
USA, University of Wuerzburg, Germany and University of Victoria, Canada prior to joining the
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Chemistry Department, IIT Kharagpur in 1998. After a 5-month stint, he moved to IIT Kanpur.
He has been a full professor at IITK since 2008. He moved to IISER Thiruvananthapuram as the
Director in April 2019.
He is a recipient of AvH postdoctoral research fellowship, Germany (1995-96), young chemist award,
and bronze and silver medals of Chemical Research Society of India (CRSI), India. He received
Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize in Chemical Sciences, India (2008), and Sastra-CNR Rao award in
Chemical Sciences (2020). He is a Fellow of Indian Academy of Sciences Bangalore (2010), Fellow
of Royal Society of Chemistry (2014) and Fellow of Indian National Science Academy (2018). He
has also been a J. C. Bose National Fellow since 2015. He has been on the editorial boards of New
J. Chemistry, J. Chem. Sci. and Int. J. Photoenergy. He is presently an associate editor of J. Chem.
Sci.
His interests are in the areas of supramolecular chemistry, organic materials, mechanistic organic
chemistry and organic photochemistry.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-IX
MADHU DIKSHIT
JC Bose National Fellow
CSIR Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow
Speaker Profile
Dr. Madhu Dikshit, a leading scientist of the country, has made significant contributions to the
general area of Molecular Pharmacology with special emphasis to redox/NO biology and metabolism.
Dr. Dikshit has impacted the area of neutrophil biology by enhancing our understanding that
how nitric oxide modulates neutrophil differentiation, survival, free radical generation, NETosis,
chemotaxis, and microbicidal activity. She has systematically investigated the role of iNOS in
metabolic regulations and insulin sensitivity. She also initiated and led the team for anti-thrombotic
drug discovery at CDRI from which one of the NCE has received DCGI permission for Phase I
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clinical trial. At THSTI, she initiated a program on drug and biomarker discovery in the area of fatty
liver disease and has made significant contributions. During the Covod-19 pandemic under a DBT-
AYUSH project, she undertook the preclinical and pharmacokinetic evaluations of select AYUSH
herbal extracts / formulations for mitigating SARS- CoV2 and associated pathologies.
Dr. Dikshit has published more than 180 well cited papers, 22 reviews in peer reviewed journals,
edited three books, has eight patents and has supervised 37 Ph.D., 10 MD theses, and a good number
of graduate students.
Former Director, CSIR Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow; Former Visiting Professor
& Head, Department of Bioscience & Bioengineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Jodhpur-
342037; Former THSTI National Chair, Translational Health Science and Technology Institute,
Faridabad-Gurgaon Expressway, Faridabad, Haryana-121001.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-IX
SHINJINI BHATNAGAR
Professor of Eminence
Translational Health Science and Technology Institute (THSTI)
Department of Biotechnology, Government of India.
Complex diseases that have public health significance in our country need unique large
multi-disciplinary research programs that bridge classical epidemiology with modern
science to find solutions. Despite several efforts to prevent preterm birth, in India among 27
million born annually, 3.6 million are preterm, and over 300,000 die each year contributing
to 25% of the overall global preterm related deaths. In our GARBH-Ini (interdisciplinary
Group for Advanced Research on adverse BirtH outcomes – DBT INdia Initiative)
program, we hypothesized that interdisciplinary insights in a time-series study will stratify
women into defined risk groups for preterm birth. Our primary objective is to use multi-
disciplinary approach that will facilitate early identification of those “at risk”, enabling
implementation of sustainable health and medical management tools in clinical practice
and in the community. The study is hosted in a large prospectively followed GARBH-
Ini cohort of more than 12,000 pregnant women enrolled early in pregnancy in a district
hospital in Haryana. We have identified novel clinical and epidemiological risk factors
that are now being integrated into dynamic prediction models. The crosstalk between
clinical epidemiology, imaging and data science has facilitated Indian population-specific
pregnancy dating models with higher precision than the existing models. Further, we
have used AI to automate fetal biometric measurements as an important public health
tool. In the discovery phase we have identified novel molecular biological markers based
on omics technology that will be validated further as diagnostic panels to predict preterm
birth.
This platform will continue to serve as an important national resource for answering
additional research questions around child health.
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Dr. Bhatnagar was earlier at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi for 25 years
as a pediatric gastroenterologist and senior research scientist. Her group provided evidence-based
recommendations in child health for global and national policy, notably a dietary algorithm for
treatment of persistent diarrhea and the introduction of low osmolarity oral rehydration salts
solution and zinc in treatment of childhood diarrhea. She coordinated the development of a rapid
point of care test for diagnosis of celiac disease.
In recent years, Dr. Bhatnagar has established large multidisciplinary research programs that
bridge classical epidemiology with modern science to find solutions for diseases that have major
public health significance. The current focus is pre-term birth and fetal growth restriction.
Dr. Bhatnagar is a Fellow of the Indian National Science Academy, the National Academy of
Medical Sciences, and the National Academy of Sciences. She has received numerous honours and
awards over the course of her career, including recognition for research in Pediatrics and Pediatric
Gastroenterology.
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SECTIONAL COMMITTEE-IV
SOMNATH DASGUPTA
INSA Senior Scientist
Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Somnath Dasgupta, currently INSA Senior Scientist at ISI, Kolkata, served as Geologist
in Geological Survey of India, as Professor in Jadavpur University, as Professor at IISER-
Kolkata, as Vice Chancellor, Assam University and as Ford Foundation Chair Professor at
Jamia Milia Islamia. He obtained his Ph.D degree from Jadavpur University in 1979. He is
a Fellow of all the three National Science Academies of India , and of World Academy of
Sciences, Trieste. He is a recipient of National Mineral Award from the Ministry of Mines,
Krishnan Medal from the Indian Geophysical Union, INSA Teachers Award, D.N. Wadia
Medal from INSA and J.C. Bose National Fellowship from DST. He is a Fellow of the
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and served as Mercator Guest Professor (DFG) at
Ruhr University, Germany, as JSPS Visiting Professor Hokkaido University, Japan and as
Visiting Scientist at the University of Arizona.
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Speaker Profile
Dr. RN Singh obtained his B Sc, MSc (Geophysics) and Ph D degrees from Banaras Hindu
University in 1962, 1964 and 1969 respectively. He joined National Geophysical research Institute
(NGRI), Hyderabad in 1964 and made significant contribution in modeling of geophysical and
environmental processes. He constructed models of thermal and rheological structure of Indian
continental lithosphere, of processes underlying formation of Cuddapah basin and charnockites
of southern Indian shield and isostatic flexural compensation mechanisms of Afanasi Nikitin
seamount, slow spreading Carlsberg and Chagos Laccadive oceanic ridge and fracture zones of Indian
oceanic lithosphere. He contributed to modeling of groundwater dynamics, and fate and transport of
contaminants in environment. He participated in institution building in formation of CSIR Centre
for Mathematical Modeling and Computer Simulation Bengaluru which he later headed during
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1996-99 and as Director of National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI),
Nagpur where he initiated frontier researches in integrated quantitative physical, chemical and
biological aspects of environmental processes, during 1999-2003. He was CSIR Emeritus Scientist
during 2005-10 and INSA Senior Scientist during 2010-15, both at NGRI, Hyderabad. Since 2015,
he is a vising professor at IIT Gandhinagar where his teaching/research focus is in modeling of earth
surface system. For his research work, he has been awarded with Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar prize
of Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, National Award in Geoscience and Technology of
Ministry of Earth Sciences and elected to the fellowships of Indian Academy of Sciences in 1988 and
India National Science Academy in 1991.
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15 DECEMBER 2022 12:15-13:00
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SANDHYA S. VISWESWARIAH
Honorary Professor
Department of Molecular Reproduction, Development and Genetics,
Indian Institute of Sciences, Bengaluru
Speaker Profile
Sandhya S Visweswariah obtained her PhD in 1987 from the Department of Biochemistry, Indian
Institute of Science, Bengaluru. She is currently an Honorary Professor at the Department of
Molecular Reproduction, Development, and Genetics at the Indian Institute of Science, and an
Adjunct Professor at the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry University of Bergen, Norway. She is
a Fellow of The World Academy of Sciences (TWAS), the Indian National Science Academy (INSA)
and the Indian Academy of Science (FASc). She has received a Gold Medal in Botany, the YT
Thathachari Award and the CDRI Award for Excellence in Drug Research. She has been a recipient
of a HFSP Short-Term Fellowship, and the Fulbright-Nehru Senior Research Fellowship. She is a
JC Bose Fellow; currently a holder of a Royal Society Collaborative Grant for Research Professors;
and is a Margdarshi Fellow supported by the Wellcome Trust-DBT India Alliance.
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15 DECEMBER 2022 13:00-13:45
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DESIRAZU N. RAO
Honorary Professor
Department of Biochemistry,
Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
Email: [email protected]
Acetylation of biomolecules (e.g., proteins and small molecules) is a process that occurs
in cells of all domains of life and has emerged as a critical mechanism for the control of
many aspects of cellular physiology, including chromatin maintenance, transcriptional
regulation, primary metabolism, cell structure, and likely other cellular processes. Recent
proteomic studies reveal that 5–10% of mammalian and bacterial proteins undergo lysine
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acetylation, a post-translational modification that adds an acetyl group to the e-amino
group of lysine residues. Nε-acetylation is emerging as an abundant post-translational
modification of bacterial proteins. Global surveys have revealed acetylation in diverse
bacterial phyla. It will be important to elucidate how the acetylomes are maintained,
i.e. which enzymes are responsible. Protein acetyltransferases and deacetylases tend to
physically associate with substrates, thus providing a key manner in which substrates can
be identified. The newly realized spectrum of acetylated proteins constitutes an important
framework for understanding the fundamental roles of acetylation in different biological
and pathological processes.
Speaker Profile
Dr. Desirazu N Rao joined the Department of Biochemistry, Indian Institute of Science (IISc),
Bangalore in June 1989 as an assistant Professor and retired as a Professor in July 2020. During
2005-2015 he was the Chairman of the Division of Biological sciences, IISc. Prof Rao is an Honorary
Professor in the Institute and an Advisor, Challakere campus of IISc. In addition, he is the Convenor
of the Talent Development Center at the Challakere campus, which conducts Teachers Training
Programs throughout the year. Dr. DN Rao is currently the President of the Society of Biological
Chemists (India).
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16 DECEMBER 2022 09:00-09:45
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M.L. MUNJAL
AICTE Distinguished Chair Professor and INSA Honorary Scientist
Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Dr. ML Munjal has been on the Faculty of the Indian Institute of Science since 1968. He has
published over 200 papers in professional journals. He has authored a monograph ‘Acoustics
of Ducts and Mufflers’ (Wiley, Original edition, 1987; Second edition, February 2014, UK), a
textbook on ‘Noise and Vibration Control’ (World Scientific Publishers, Singapore, June 2013)
and contributed chapters in a couple of international handbooks. He has guided 18 PhD students
and executed over 125 industrial consultancy projects in different aspects of noise control and
quieter designs, with particular application to automobiles. Since its inception in 1998, Prof.
Munjal has been Convener of the Facility for Research in Technical Acoustics. Since 1988, he
has been a Distinguished International Member of the Institute of Noise Control Engineering of
USA. Recently, Prof. Munjal has been elected as Honorary Fellow of the International Institute of
Acoustics and Vibration. He was Chairman of the National Committee for Noise Pollution Control
from 1997 to 2015. He was President of the Acoustical Society of India during the years 1999
and 2000. He has been Member of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Acoustics
and Vibration since 1996. He is Fellow of the Indian National Science Academy as well as Indian
National Academy of Engineering, and Member of the European Academy of Sciences. He was
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honored by the then PM with the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize in Engineering Sciences for the
year 1986 and the DRDO Academic Excellence Award for the Year 2009. After his superannuation
in 2010, he served as Honorary Professor for five years, INAE Distinguished Professor for three
years and INSA Senior Scientist for five years. Currently, Dr. Munjal is AICTE Distinguished
Chair Professor and INSA Honorary Scientist at IISc.
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16 DECEMBER 2022 09:45-10:30
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SANKAR K. PAL
National Science Chair
Center for Soft Computing Research
Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata
The second part deals with some granular mining applications such as, video tracking in
ambiguous situations in the context of both shallow and deep learning. Roles of different
kinds of granules and rough lower-upper approximations in unsupervised object tracking
are demonstrated. It is shown how these approximations in temporal domain provide
an estimate of object model in unsupervised tracking, even under complete occlusion.
This is followed by a new concept of granulated deep learning (GDL) and description of a
recently developed G-RCNN model for enhancing the detection accuracy.
The talk concludes mentioning some challenging issues and future directions of research
concerning data science including some cautions for researchers in DL.
Speaker Profile
Sankar K. Pal (https://www.isical.ac.in/~sankar) received two PhD degrees, one from the University
of Calcutta, Kolkata, India and the other from Imperial College, London, UK. He joined the Indian
Statistical Institute (ISI), Kolkata in 1975 as a CSIR-Senior Research Fellow where he became a full
professor in 1987, a distinguished scientist in 1998, the Director in 2005, and the President in 2022.
Currently, he is a National Science Chair, and ISI-Emeritus Professor. He founded the Machine
Intelligence Unit and the Center for Soft Computing Research at his Institute in Kolkata. He is
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a former Distinguished Professor of Indian National Science Academy (INSA), Chair Professor
of Indian National Academy of Engineering (INAE), Jawaharlal Nehru Fellow, and J.C. Bose
National Fellow.
He worked at the University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA; University of Maryland, College
Park, MD, USA; NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX, USA; and US Naval Research
Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA. He held several visiting positions in Italy, Poland, Hong Kong,
and Australia. He has coauthored 21 books and about 500 research publications in the areas of
pattern recognition, machine learning, image/video processing, data mining, web intelligence, soft
computing, bioinformatics, social-network analysis, and cognitive machines. His Google scholar
h-index is 80 with about 35000 citations.
Prof. Pal received several national/ international awards including the Padma Shri, S.S. Bhatnagar
Prize, G.D Birla Award, Om Bhasin award, Khwarizmi International Award (Iran), NASA Tech
Brief (USA), and IEEE Fellow Class Golden Jubilee Medal (USA). He has been an IEEE Computer
Science Distinguished Visitor since 1987. He is/was on the editorial boards of 25 prestigious
international journals including several IEEE Transactions. He has visited 44 countries as a
keynote/ invited speaker and academic visitor. He is a Fellow of IEEE, TWAS (The World Academy
of Sciences), IAPR (International Association for Pattern Recognition), IFSA (International Fuzzy
Systems Association), and all the four National Academies for Science and Engineering in India.
He is also a member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts.
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16 DECEMBER 2022 09:45-10:30
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NAGENDRA K. SINGH
National Professor
National Institute for Plant Biotechnology
Pusa Campus, New Delhi
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genes for reproductive stage salt tolerance have been transferred into five MVs, viz. ADT
45, Gayatri, MTU 1010, Pusa 44 and Sarjoo 52.
We used foreground selection markers for the presence of desired gene, recombinant
selection markers to reduce the linkage drag around the target gene and high-density
background selection using a 50K SNP chip. Finally, MV-NILs with more than 95%
similarity to the recipient parent genome have been released for commercial cultivation.
These climate-smart rice varieties are gaining popularity and will provide yield stability
in the adverse climatic conditions. So far more than 20 such varieties of rice developed
through marker-assisted breeding have been released for commercial cultivation by
farmers in India e.g. Pusa Basmati 1, Improved Samba Mahsuri, Pusa 1637, Ranjit-Sub1,
DRR Dhan 50, Pusa 1847. MABB is the most promising and technically feasible option for
introgression of useful genes in the background of MVs cultivated in millions of hectares
but are sensitive to one or more of the climate-change induced stresses. Correction of these
susceptibilities by introgression of small genomic segments promises high impact on
rice production stability. A major limitation of molecular breeding is the availability of
validated markers. Availability of affordable genotyping services within reach is another
limitation that requires establishment of genotyping service centres.
Further, we are using wild rice germplasm collected from different parts of India to identify
novel genes for climate resilience. Crop wild relatives are adapted to wide geographical
and climatic conditions and hence are a rich source of genes that can be harnessed for
developing climate-resilient varieties. Therefore exploration, conservation, evaluation
and utilization of fast depleting crop wild relatives gene pool is the need of the day.
Efforts are also underway to combine genes for disease and pest resistance in these MVs
without losing their yield and quality attributes crucial for consumer acceptance. In the
near future, genome editing tools for allele replacement (SDN-2) are likely to substitute
the present backcross breeding approach for high speed precision breeding of climate-
resilient varieties of rice and other crops.
Speaker Profile
Prof. Nagendra Kumar Singh is well-known agricultural scientist in the area of genomics and
molecular plant breeding. He is a distinguished alumnus of BHU Varanasi, who after 10 years of
Ph. D. and postdoctoral studies in University of Adelaide and CSRIO in Australia returned to India
in 1991. He has served in CSIR-CFTRI, Mysore for 3 years; GB Pant University for Agriculture
and Technology, Pantnagar for 6 years and for the last 22 years at ICAR-NIPB, New Delhi. Apart
from leading several multi-institutional research projects, Prof. Singh has guided more than 50
students for their M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees. He has more than 400 research publications with
26,500 citations and an H-index of 73.
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Prof. Singh is the lead Indian scientist responsible for decoding the genomes of rice, tomato, wheat,
pigeonpea, jute and mango in India after establishing world-class genomics laboratories at ICAR-
NIPB. He led a team of Indian scientists to decode the Arhar genome, world’s first pulse genome
and the first plant genome sequenced entirely in India. Prof. Singh has developed high-density SNP
chip arrays of rice, pigeonpea and mango and identified a number of genes and DNA markers for
rice, wheat, pigeonpea, jute and mango breeding. In an important conservation effort, Prof. Singh
has collected >1000 different wild rice accessions by travelling thousands of kilometers in the remote
villages in 16 states of India and identified accessions resistant to drought, flooding and salinity,
which are important genetic resource for development of climate-resilient rice varieties. Earlier,
Prof. Singh has invented new methods for analysis of wheat seed proteins and discovered a new class
of wheat seed storage protein named ‘Triticin’ responsible for excellent chapati and bread making
quality.
Prof. Singh is an elected Fellow of major science academies of India including INSA, NAAS and
NASI, and is recipient of several honors and awards, including the highest individual award of
ICAR, Norman Borlaug Award 2015, and the JC Bose National Fellowship in 2022.
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Annexure-III
14 DECEMBER 2022 14:15-15:15
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AWARD LECTURE
Sequencing of its genome, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy in 1999, immensely
accelerated both basic and applied research on this bacterium, and has revealed some
fascinating aspects of its biology. Prominent among these are (i) unexpected facets of its
genome organization (ii) novel mechanisms underlying DNA repair and ROS scavenging,
leading to phenomenal radioresistance, and (iii) unique DNA damage-responsive gene
expression and its regulation. Extensive genetic engineering of this microbe has been
carried out to develop bioremediation technologies for highly radioactive nuclear waste
as well as for other polluted environments. Impressive applications developed using
this microbe or its metabolites range from nanotechnologies to radioprotectors and
cancer treatment to vaccine development. The presentation will highlight some of these
discoveries and discuss future prospects.
Speaker Profile
• M.Sc. (Botany): Science Faculty Gold Medal, Jiwaji University, Gwalior (1972).
• Ph.D. (Botany): Gujarat University, Ahmedabad (1985).
• Graduate (Biology and Radiobiology): 16th batch of BARC Training School (1972-73).
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Joined the Bio-Medical Group, BARC in 1973 and served in different capacities for 42
years.
• Superannuated as Distinguished Scientist, Director, Bio-Science Group, & Head, Molecular
Biology Division, BARC in 2014.
• Emeritus Professor-HBNI (2014-2019), DST-J C Bose National Fellow (2009-2020), Raja
Ramanna Fellow-DAE (2015-2018).
• Distinguished Professor, UM-DAE-Centre for Excellence in Basic Sciences (2018-
continuing)
• Fellow, Indian National Science Academy, New Delhi; Indian Academy of Sciences,
Bengaluru; National Academy of Science, Allahabad; National Academy of Agricultural
Sciences, India; Maharashtra Academy of Sciences.
• Recipient Prof. J.V. Bhat-Eureka Forbes Award - Excellence in Microbiology (1990); Young
Scientist Award - Cyanobacterial Biotechnology (1996); Prof. K.S. Bilgrami Memorial
Award - INSA (2006), Indian Nuclear Society Award (2006).
• Recipient IAEA Fellowship (1976-77); Nuffield Foundation Fellowship, U.K (1984); USAID
Fellowship, USA (1988-89).
• India’s Representative at United Nation’s Scientific Committee on Effects of Atomic
Radiations (UNSCEAR) (2014).
• Coordinated a DAE-sponsored multi-institutional project entitled “Thermal Ecological
Studies” which assessed impact of thermal effluents from operating nuclear power plants on
aquatic ecosystems (2000-2006).
• Member Selection and Evaluation Committees of INSA, DST, DBT, CSIR, ICAR and DAE
and 6 research institutes in India.
• Research interests : Response of organisms to ionizing radiations and other environmental
stressors and development of eco-friendly biotechnologies for agricultural applications and
for environmental clean-up.
• Currently engaged in teaching integrated 5-year M.Sc. programme, popularization of science
and enhancing public awareness of science in India.
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H.R. KRISHNAMURTHY
Honorary (Emeritus) Professor
Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Prof. HR Krishnamurthy obtained his B.Sc.(Hons) in Physics from Central College,
Bangalore University, M.Sc. in Physics from IIT Kanpur, did his doctoral research from
1972-76 at Cornell University with Kenneth G Wilson (NL 1982), and postdoctoral work
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He joined the Department of Physics
at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore in 1978, and holds the position of Honorary
(Emeritus) Professor there after retiring in 2017. His research interests are in theoretical
condensed Matter Physics, with a focus on strongly interacting quantum and classical
many-body systems, especially quantum impurity physics, and theories of strong
correlation phenomena in solids and in systems of cold atoms in optical lattices. Prof.
Krishnamurthy is a recepient of the INSA medal for young scientists in 1983, a Fellow of all
three Science Academies of India and of the World Academy of Science (TWAS), a fellow
of the American Physical Society, and a recipient of the J.C. Bose National Fellowship and
the SERB Distinguished Fellowship.
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Annexure-IV
15 DECEMBER 2022 14:45-15:15
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ADDRESS BY DG, CSIR
N. KALAISELVI
Secretary, DSIR and Director General, CSIR
New Delhi
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Dr. (Mrs) N Kalaiselvi assumed charge as Secretary, DSIR and Director General, CSIR, New
Delhi on August 8, 2022. Dr. N Kalaiselvi is the first women Director General of CSIR. Prior
to taking over as Secretary, DSIR and DG, CSIR, she was working as Director, CSIR-Central
Electrochemical Research Institute, Karaikudi.
Dr. N Kalaiselvi (born: February 5, 1967) obtained her Bachelor’s degree in Chemistry from
Government Arts College, Tirunelveli affiliated to Madurai Kamaraj University, Madurai. She
obtained her Post Graduate Degree in Chemistry from Government Arts College Coimbatore and
did her PhD at Annamalai University, Chidambaram.
Dr. Kalaiselvi’s research work of more than 25 years is primarily focused on electrochemical power
systems and in particular, development of electrode materials, custom designed synthesis methods,
optimization of reaction parameters and electrochemical evaluation of in-house prepared electrode
materials for their suitability in energy storage device assembly. Her research interests include
lithium and beyond lithium batteries, supercapacitors and waste-to-wealth driven electrodes and
electrolytes for energy storage and electrocatalytic applications.
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project, sponsored by CSIR to the tune of Rs. 68.54 Crore] with CSIR-CECRI as the Nodal lab
and 6 CSIR Institutes as participating labs during 2012-2017. The sectoral monitoring committee
Chaired by Prof. Baldevraj graded this project as EXCELLENT.
She was involved in the development of practically viable Sodium-ion/Lithium-sulfur batteries and
supercapacitors and continues her research in these fields. As a nominee of CSIR-CECRI, she has
participated in the meetings conducted at various levels by MNRE and TIFAC (2015 onwards) for
the implementation of e-mobility in India with indigenous technological support from CSIR and in
particular from CSIR-CECRI in a major way. She was instrumental and coordinated the preparation
of the Technical Report on NMEM (National Mission for Electric Mobility) in collaboration with
TIFAC identified academic, research and industrial partners. She was a part of MNRE initiated
Mobility Mission Concept Note too. Dr. Kalaiselvi was the Theme Director of Energy and Energy
Devices (E2D) of CSIR, wherein CSIR-CECRI is the Nodal laboratory.
Dr. Kalaiselvi has more than 135 research papers and 6 patents to her credit. Under her guidance,
12 research scholars have received Ph.D. Degrees and 2 researchers are currently pursuing their
Ph.D. She is a recipient of many prestigious awards including MRSI medal, CSIR Raman Research
Fellowship, INSA-NRF Exchange award, Brain Pool Fellowship of Korea, the Most Inspiring
Women Scientist Award and C.V RAMAN MAHILA VIJNANA PURASKARA at 12th National
Women’s Science Congress held at Mysore.
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Annexure-V
15 DECEMBER 2022 15:30-16:30
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PUBLIC LECTURE
ASHOKE SEN
Professor
International Centre for Theoretical Sciences,
Bengaluru
Email: [email protected]
Speaker Profile
Research Interest: String Theory
Year of Birth: 1956
School (1962 - 1972): Shailendra Sircar Vidyalaya, Calcutta, India
College (1972 - 1975): Presidency College, Calcutta, India
University (1976 - 1978) : Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India
Graduate Study (1978 - 1982): State university of New York at Stonybrook, USA
Post-doctoral Experience:
1982 - 1985: Fermilab, Batavia, USA
1985 - 1988: SLAC, Stanford, USA
Permanent positions held
1988 - 1995: Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, India
1995 - 2021: Harish-Chandra Research Institute, Allahabad, India
2021 - present: International Centre for Theoretical Sciences, Bengaluru, India
https://home.icts.res.in/~sen/biodata.html
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Annexure-VI
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24. ALOKE PAUL
Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru
25. NARAYAN PRADHAN
Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Kolkata
26. SUBRAMANYAM RAJAGOPAL
University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad
27. UDAYKUMAR RANGA
Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bengaluru
28. CHERUKUMALLI SRINIVASA RAO
ICAR-National Academy of Agricultural Research Management (NAARM),
Hyderabad
29. ARUN KUMAR SHUKLA
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur
30. GYANENDRA PRATAP SINGH
ICAR- Indian Institute of Wheat & Barley Research, Karnal
31. MANDYAM DODDAMANE SRINIVAS
Centre for Policy Studies, Chennai
32. PRADEEP SRIVASTAVA
Indian Institute of Technology-Roorkee, Roorkee
33. RAJESH K SRIVASTAVA
Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi
34. JYOTI PRAKASH TAMANG
Sikkim University (Central University), Gangtok, Sikkim
35. PUNNIYAMURTHY THARMALINGAM
Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Guwahati
36. SHANTHI PAVAN YENDLURI
Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai
37. SEIKH MOHAMMAD YUSUF
Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai
1. ASHOKE SEN
International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS)- TIFR, Bengaluru
2. SURYANARAYANA SASTRY RAMASESHA
Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru
3. VELAYUDHAN ANANDAVALLY RAGHUNATHAN
Raman Research Institute, Bengaluru
4. AMIT PRAKASH SHARMA (PRAVASI FELLOW)
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, New Delhi
5. SUVENDRA NATH BHATTACHARYYA
CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, Kolkata
6. SUBHADEEP CHATTERJEE
Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics (CDFD), Hyderabad
7. ANINDA JIBAN BHATTACHARYYA
Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru
8. SUNIL CHANDRAN LEELA
Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru
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9. VINEET KUMAR GAHALAUT
CSIR- National Geophysical Research Institute, Hyderabad
10. VINOD KUMAR
University of Delhi, Delhi
11. PRASUN KUMAR MUKHERJEE
Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai
12. MAYASANDRA SUBRAHMANYA SRIRAM
KV Sarma Research Foundation, Chennai
13. VIRENDRA MANI TIWARI
CSIR- National Geophysical Research Institute, Hyderabad
14. AKHILESH KUMAR VERMA
University of Delhi, Delhi
15. PALURU VIJAYACHARI
Ministry of Health & FW, Port Blair
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Annexure-VII
1. Mohd Asgher
2. Haritha Bollinedi
3. Dhiman Chakravarty
4. Debdip Ganguly
5. Amit Jaiswal
6. Biplab Maji
7. Tridib Kumar Mondal
8. MD Nasim
9. Lakshmi Narayan Ramasubramanian
10. Kabir Ramola
11. Akanksha Singh
12. Abhishek Sinha
13. Hrishikesh A Tavanandi
14. Sudipta Tung
1. Shalini Agarwal
2. Wareed Ahmed
3. Mithu Baidya
4. Aditya Bandopadhyay
5. Antara Arupkumar Banerjee
6. Riddhipratim Basu
7. Debasish Borah
8. Snehasis Daschakraborty
9. Sreejith Ganesh Jaya
10. Shyam Sundar Ghoshal
11. Imran Asatar Girach
12 Shraddha Madhav Karve
13. Kutubuddin Ali Molla
14. Kamalika Mukherjee
15. Prabhakar Naraga
16. Anubhab Roy
17. Sutanu Roy
18. Nisha Singh
19. Suraj Soman
20. Kartik Sunagar
21. Himanshu Tyagi
22. Hareesh VS
23. Md. Ali Zinna
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3. Uma Dhawan
Bhaskaracharya College of Applied Sciences, University of Delhi, New Delhi
4. Roshan D’ Souza
Sophia College (Autonomous), Mumbai
5. Pankajkumar Natawarlal Gajjar
Gujarat University, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
6. Naseer Iqbal
University of Kashmir, Srinagar
7. Upendranath Nandi
Scottish Church College, Kolkata
8. Charu Dogra Rawat
Ramjas College, University of Delhi, Delhi
9. Pranab Sarkar
Visva-Bharati (Central University), Santiniketan, West Bengal
10. Shalivahan
Indian Institute of Technology (ISM), Dhanbad, Jharkhand
11. Uma Shankar
North-Eastern Hill University, Shillong, Meghalaya
12. Paul Agastian Theoder
Loyola College, Chennai
1. Vandana Bhalla
Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar
2. Debnarayan Jana
University of Calcutta, Kolkata.
3. Gagan Dhawan
Acharya Narendra Dev College, University of Delhi, Delhi
4. Chockalingam Jeganathan
Birla Institute of Technology, Mesra, Ranchi
5. Nataraj Karaba
University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru
6. P Dilip Kumar
Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur
7. Avinash Shankar Kumbhar
Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune
8. N Latha
Sri Venkateswara College, University of Delhi, Delhi
9. Shashi Kant Mishra
BHU, Varanasi
10. Parmjit S Panesar
Sant Longowal Institute of Engineering and Technology, Longowal, Punjab
11. Vimal Rarh
SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi
12. Reghu Ravindran
Kerala Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, Wayanad
13. Sachi Srivastava
Delhi University, Delhi
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