K Ramamritham

Sai University, Chennai

Krithi Ramamritham has spent almost equal lengths of time at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and at IIT Bombay as a Chair Professor of Computer Science and Engineering. He has served as Dean (R&D) at IIT Bombay and headed IIT Bombay’s Center for Urban Science and Engineering (CUSE). He is currently a distinguished professor at Sai University, Chennai. His current research involves applying computational approaches to energy management. This work exploits and extends the state-of-the-art in database systems, real-time computing, sensor networks, embedded systems, mobile computing and smart grids. He has guided close to 40 PhD students. Krithi’s publications garnered over 25,302 citations with an h-index of 85. He is a Fellow of the IEEE, ACM, Indian Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Sciences, India, and the Indian National Academy of Engineering. He was honoured with a Doctor of Science (Honoris Causa) by the University of Sydney, Australia. He is also a recipient of the Distinguished Alumnus Award from IIT Madras. Twice he received the IBM Faculty Award. He received the 2016 Outstanding Technical Contributions and Leadership Award from the IEEE Technical Committee for real-time systems and the Outstanding Service Award from IEEE’s CEDA. He has received IIT Bombay’s HH Mathur Award for Excellence in Research in Applied Sciences. He was awarded the IIT Madras Robert Bosch Centre’s Distinguished Fellowship and the SC Sahasrabuddhe Lifetime Achievement Award from IIT Bombay.

K Ramamritham

Session 1C: Inaugural Lectures by Fellows/Associates

A Jayakrishnan

A SMART way to solve problems

In this talk, I will share my thoughts on problem solving using the “SMART” principle. hat is this principle and how we have applied it in the energy domain to solve every-day problems to reduce energy consumption while taking care of human comfort‒will be discussed. While these problems were the core of my research for over a decade and many papers and artifacts came out of our Smart Energy Informatics Lab (SEIL) at IIT Bombay, I will discuss couple of examples that all of us can relate to‒with a goal of prodding you to see if this principle is applicable to your domain and how you can frame your research questions applying the SMART principle.

© 2025 Indian Academy of Sciences, Bengaluru.