MUMBAI, India, Jan. 2 -- Intellectual Property India has published a patent application (202541123104 A) filed by Malla Reddy (MR) Deemed to be University; Malla Reddy College Of Engineering And Technology; Malla Reddy University; Malla Reddy Vishwavidyapeeth; Malla Reddy Engineering College For Womens; and Dr. M Santosh Kumar, Medchal-Malkajgiri, Telangana, on Dec. 6, 2025, for 'emi-resilient microcontroller using pattern-learning noise filters.'

Inventor(s) include Dr. M Santosh Kumar; Dr V Madhusudhana Reddy; Dr. Ome Nerella; Dr. Syed Mohd Faisal; Dr. N Vishwanath; Dr G Prasanna Kumar; Dr. A. Pradeep Kumar; and Navya Raparthi.

The application for the patent was published on Jan. 2, under issue no. 01/2026.

According to the abstract released by the Intellectual Property India: "The invention will describe a microcontroller that will work within high electromagnetic interference environments (EMI). It integrates noise-learning filters broadly adapted and operates in real time; features and those counts the disturbance roll patterns and the irregular manipulation of inner signal-processing pathways. The proposed system is dynamic, contrasting with traditional microcontrollers that use a static filtering coefficient and fixed shielding to filter the signal, as the realized system constantly monitors the noise patterns of incoming signals and updates its filtering coefficients to enable clean operation and constant operation. This microcontroller is based on conjunction of analog front-end conditioning technique, digital noise-pattern recognition technique, and machine-learned correction profile technique to ensure blocked data paths. It is capable of separating between operation signals and bursts of interference, allowing a higher performance of preserving timing along with control. This renders the invention to be applicable in industrial automation, electrostatic devices in the auto sector, medical apparatus, power infrastructure and other processes, which are subject to electromagnetic disruptions. Generally, the system offers a powerful and adaptive microcontroller architecture, which improves noise immunity, less hardware shielding requirements and long-term operation in electrically demanding environments."

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