Scott Weinstein
Professor of Philosophy and
Computer and Information Science (CIS)
Email | Personal Webpage | Research Webpage
Research Expertise: Logic and Computation
Scott's research interests are in computational learning theory, descriptive complexity theory, finite model theory, mathematical logic, and the philosophy of mathematics.
Education:
PhD 1975 - Rockefeller University
- Non-front-fanged colubroid snakes: A current evidence-based analysis of medical significance, Weinstein, S.A. | White, J. | Keyler, D.E. | Warrell, D.A., Toxicon, 2013
- Response to Jackson et al. (2012), Weinstein, S.A. | White, J. | Keyler, D.E. | Kardong, K.V., Toxicon, 2013
- Response to Letter entitled "Cardiac toxicity following cobra envenomation", Ismail, A.K. | Weinstein, S.A., Clinical Toxicology, 2012
- Replies to Fry et al. (Toxicon 2012, 60/4, 434-448). Part A. Analyses of squamate reptile oral glands and their products: A call for caution in formal assignment of terminology designating biological function, Weinstein, S.A. | Keyler, D.E. | White, J., Toxicon, 2012
- Algorithmic analysis of array-accessing programs, Alur, R. | Černý, P. | Weinstein, S., ACM Transactions on Computational Logic, 2012


