What the study found
Guruklya is described as an AI-powered learning platform that was associated with improved academic engagement in a university campus setting. The abstract reports gains in performance, reduced administrative burden, and faster assessment evaluation.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that the platform is ready for campus-wide use and can answer academic questions accurately and efficiently. They also present it as a way to maintain a technologically enriched and continuous learning experience for students.
What the researchers tested
The article describes a platform built with artificial intelligence, natural language processing, and high-performance computing. It combines the Gemini Large Language Model, an emotion-aware conversational agent that uses sentiment analysis and facial or textual signals, and an automated examination evaluation system within a scalable Flask microservices architecture with SQLAlchemy, role-based access control, and multi-tenant support for administrators, faculty, and students.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract states that automated grading reduced evaluation time by 85 percent. It also reports that administrative burden fell by 40 percent, student problem-solving effectiveness rose by 65 percent, engagement metrics improved by 28 percent, and individualized learning plans with web-based evaluation increased student results by 35 percent.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not describe a comparison group, study design details, or how the reported percentages were measured. Limitations are not otherwise described in the abstract.
Key points
- The abstract describes Guruklya as an AI-powered learning platform for university campus use.
- It reports an emotion-aware conversational agent, automated exam evaluation, and support for administrators, faculty, and students.
- Automated evaluation time was reported to decrease by 85 percent.
- The abstract says administrative burden fell by 40 percent and engagement metrics improved by 28 percent.
- Student problem-solving effectiveness increased by 65 percent, and student results rose by 35 percent with individualized learning plans and web-based evaluation.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- AI campus platform reports better engagement and faster evaluation
- Authors:
- Prof. Deepak B., Prof. Bharath Setturu, Prof. Ashith Sagar Naidu
- Publication date:
- 2026-02-25
- OpenAlex record:
- View
Get the weekly research newsletter
Stay current with peer-reviewed research without reading academic papers — one filtered digest, every Friday.


