no, by “profile” I don’t mean these exact numbers - the top colleges don’t differentiate between 2200 and 2300, between 2300 and 2400 (and non-top colleges don’t distinguish below that). (Note that you don’t add up the SAT Subjects.) Actually I wasn’t speaking in terms of number at all since for the most selective universities, they wouldn’t be the most important factor by far. They’re just used as a confirmation of grade/potential and as a comparison tool. THIS is the message I was trying to convey to OP - his/her focus on standardized test scores is the wrong one wrt US university admissions.
By profile, I mean “Stem-centric, extremely-high scorer”.
The numbers were from a publication but I don’t have it here now, and/or perhaps from IndiaInk at the NYT. You’re right, I didn’t check if the number included grad students though. And since I can’t find the source right now, I assume I copied the number right, but it’s possible it was 10,900 - I don’t think so but it’s possible to imagine it.
However, if you think in terms of “stem-centric, extrememy-high scorer applicant”, I’m sure you see what I mean in terms of similarity of profile. Quibbling about numbers won’t help OP because, really, his/her score profile is excellent but very similar to many, many Indian applicants. OP needs to focus on something and excel at it in order to stand out.