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Cohypo Driving India’s Research Future and Innovation

Building Viksit Bharat – Cohypo’s Role in India’s Research Future

India has the policy, the funding, and the ambition. What it has lacked is the platform that puts researchers in the same room. Cohypo may be that missing piece.

India’s ambition for its research ecosystem has never been more clearly stated. The Anusandhan National Research Foundation, established through an Act of Parliament in 2023 with a ₹50,000 crore mandate over five years, tasked with seeding a culture of innovation across every university and R&D laboratory in the country. The One Nation One Subscription scheme, launched in January 2025, providing 1.8 crore students, faculty and researchers with free access to 13,000 international journals. The National Education Policy 2020, which placed research at the very centre of India’s development agenda. The direction is unmistakable. What has been less clear, until now, is where individual researchers fit into this national machinery – and how a faculty member in Bhopal or a doctoral scholar in Coimbatore is supposed to translate grand policy into a published paper. Cohypo is building exactly that bridge.

The rankings momentum – and the gap beneath it

India’s QS World University Rankings trajectory tells an encouraging story. In 2026, 54 Indian institutions were ranked globally – a fivefold increase from just 11 a decade ago – making India the fourth most represented country after the United States, the United Kingdom, and China. Forty-one per cent of ranked institutions improved their position year on year. Citations per faculty, academic reputation, and research impact scores have all climbed steadily. The momentum is real.

But look more closely and the picture becomes more complicated. The institutions driving that climb – the IITs, IISc, a handful of well-resourced private universities – share one thing in common: they have the networks, the infrastructure, and the institutional support to foster collaboration. The other several thousand colleges and universities that make up India’s higher education system largely do not. For a faculty member without a strong alumni network or a tier-1 institution affiliation, finding the right co-author for interdisciplinary research remains almost entirely a matter of luck.

“The government is building the top. Cohypo is building the base. Both are needed if India’s research transformation is to reach every campus, not just the ones already in the top hundred.”

Where Cohypo meets national policy

The alignment between Cohypo’s model and India’s stated research priorities is not incidental – it is structural. ANRF explicitly aims to ensure that a larger share of national research funding reaches state universities and colleges, and to forge collaborations between academia, industry, and government. But funding alone does not create collaboration; infrastructure does. Cohypo provides the matching engine, the shared workspace, the peer review pipeline, and the authorship framework that transforms a government grant into a published, Scopus-indexed paper with verified contributors.

Similarly, One Nation One Subscription solves the access problem – researchers can now read the global literature. Cohypo solves the contribution problem – researchers can now add to it. The two initiatives are not duplicates; they are sequential steps in the same journey. ONOS opens the library. Cohypo opens the lab.

Inter-university collaboration as a ranking lever

QS rankings reward inter-institutional and interdisciplinary research directly. Citations per faculty, academic reputation scores, and research impact – three of the most heavily weighted indicators – are all amplified by collaboration. A paper co-authored across two universities generates citations that lift both institutions. A Scopus-indexed output from a researcher in a tier-2 college contributes to India’s aggregate research standing in ways that no individual ranking can fully capture. Cohypo’s core model – connecting researchers across institutions around a shared hypothesis, with tools to take that hypothesis all the way to peer-reviewed publication – is, in effect, a ranking strategy for universities that have never had one before.

India’s research transformation will not be complete when the top five IITs break into the global top fifty. It will be complete when a researcher in any city, at any institution, with a strong idea and the right collaborator, can publish work that moves the needle. Cohypo is building toward that version of India – one hypothesis at a time.

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cohypo/

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