The Independent Researcher Finally Has a Door to Knock On
No university affiliation? No institutional email? No problem. Cohypo is opening up research collaboration to the people India’s academic system has always left outside.
There is a category of researcher that India’s academic system has never quite known what to do with. They are not students. They are not faculty. They do not have an institutional affiliation, a university email address, or a department head to vouch for them. But they have something that no system can manufacture: a genuine, burning question they want to answer.
They are independent researchers – and in India, they have always existed at the edges of academia. Curious enough to pursue serious research. Capable enough to produce meaningful work. But invisible to the infrastructure that was built, almost entirely, for people already inside the system.
The wall that greets them
The barriers facing an independent researcher in India are not subtle. Most journal submission portals expect an institutional affiliation. Most peer review networks are built around university connections. Most collaboration happens through department corridors, faculty WhatsApp groups, and alumni networks – all of which require, as their first condition of entry, that you already belong somewhere.
For a researcher without that affiliation, every door has a sign that reads the same thing: for members only. Their ideas do not get weaker for lack of a university name beneath them. But their ability to develop those ideas, find collaborators, access structured peer review, and publish in credible journals has, until now, been almost entirely blocked.
“A hypothesis does not know which institution you work at. It only knows whether it is worth pursuing. Cohypo is built on exactly that belief.”
– Cohypo
What Cohypo does differently
Cohypo was built around the idea that the research question comes first – not the researcher’s credentials, not their employer, not their city. When an independent researcher posts a hypothesis on Cohypo, they enter the same platform, the same matching system, and the same collaboration ecosystem as a faculty member at a top university. The playing field is not tilted. It is flat.
This matters more than it might initially seem. Independent researchers in India include retired professors who never stopped thinking, working professionals whose daily experience generates research-worthy questions, doctoral graduates who left academia but kept their curiosity, and self-taught experts whose knowledge of a subject rivals anyone with a formal title. These are not fringe figures. They are a significant, underutilised part of India’s intellectual capital – and they have simply never had a platform designed with them in mind.
A full path, not just an introduction
Cohypo does not just give independent researchers access to a collaborator directory and leave them to figure out the rest. The platform walks them through the entire research journey – from posting a hypothesis and getting matched with the right co-author, to co-writing in the shared WriteSpace editor, to submitting their work through a structured peer review pipeline staffed by more than 600 Scopus-indexed reviewers.
For an independent researcher, that peer review pipeline is particularly significant. It means that before a paper ever reaches a journal, it has been evaluated, challenged, and strengthened by people with exactly the kind of publishing track record that the independent researcher may not yet have. The credibility gap that has always made solo independent research so hard to place in reputable journals begins to close.
Who Cohypo is built for: Faculty at tier-2 and tier-3 institutions, doctoral researchers, independent scholars, retired academics, working professionals with research ambitions, and anyone with a strong hypothesis and no institutional support system to pursue it.
Invisible no more
India’s research ambitions – the QS ranking climb, the ANRF mandate, the push toward Scopus-indexed output – cannot be achieved by a handful of elite institutions alone. They require the full depth of India’s intellectual talent, including the researchers who have always been there, working quietly, without a door to knock on.
Cohypo is that door. And for the first time, it is open.
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cohypo/