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Two IIT alumnus awarded MacArthur Fellowship 'genius grants'

Two Indian-American scientists are among 23 scientists who have won this year's prestigious MacArthur Fellowship popularly known as "genius grants", for exceptional creativity in their respective fields. Indian-Americans Manu Prakash and Subhash Khot

India TV News Desk New Delhi Published : Sep 23, 2016 12:30 IST, Updated : Sep 25, 2016 14:43 IST
Two IIT alumnus receive Rs 4 crore in MacArthur Fellowship
Two IIT alumnus receive Rs 4 crore in MacArthur Fellowship 'genius grants'

Two Indian-American scientists are among 23 scientists who have won this year's prestigious MacArthur Fellowship popularly known as "genius grants", for exceptional creativity in their respective fields.

Indian-Americans Manu Prakash and Subhash Khot are alumnus of the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Kanpur and Bombay respectively.

Prakash works as an Assistant Professor in Department of Bioengineering at the Stanford University, while Khot is a theoretical computer scientist at the New York University.

The MacArthur fellowships, popularly known as "genius grants", are awarded to scholars who show exceptional creativity in their work and the prospect for still more in the future.

It includes a stipend of US $625,000 (Rs 4.17 crore approximately), given over five years, designed to provide the recipients the flexibility to pursue their activities in absence of specific obligations.

 The MacArthur Foundation recognised Prakash for his research that is "driven by curiosity about the diversity of life forms on our planet and how they work, empathy for problems in resource-poor settings, and a deep interest in democratizing the experience and joy of science globally."

"Manu Prakash is not only one of the most innovative scientists of our day, he is also using his interdisciplinary expertise to improve human health around the world," Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne said.

He said the scientist harnesses a wide array of technologies, including optical physics, computer science, fluid dynamics, biology and chemistry, to solve tangible human and scientific problems.

It is fitting that his creative approach to applying scientific principles has been recognized as true genius by the MacArthur Foundation, Lavigne said.

The Stanford University, in a release said many of Prakash's ideas come from his travels and from his childhood growing up in India.

"Being in the field gives meaning to working in global health. It teaches you empathy, a driving force so strong that it transforms ideas into actions," Prakash said.

Khot is a theoretical computer scientist whose work is provides critical insight into unresolved problems in the field of computational complexity.

His continued ingenuity and tenacity in exploring the potential of the UGC will drive this important and fruitful area of research for many years to come, the MacArthur Foundation said in a statement.

Khot received a B.Tech (1999) from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, and a Ph.D. (2003) from Princeton University.

Sri Lankan-American Ahilan Arulanantham is the third South Asian to bag this prestigious award.

He is an attorney working to secure the right to due process for individuals facing deportation.

Through advocacy and successful litigation of a series of landmark cases, Arulanantham has expanded immigrant detainees' access to legal representation and limited the government's power to detain them indefinitely, the Foundation said.

In an interview, Arulanantham said he would donate his $ 625,000 prize for the welfare of immigrant children.

(With agency inputs)

 

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