Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Neil Immerman

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Name
  
Neil Immerman

Role
  
Computer scientist


Neil Immerman httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Books
  
Descriptive Complexity, Local Economic and Employment Development Culture and Local Development

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Education
  
Cornell University (1980)

Decidability of Inferring Inductive Invariants


Neil Immerman (24 November 1953, Manhasset, New York) is an American theoretical computer scientist, a professor of computer science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He is one of the key developers of descriptive complexity, an approach he is currently applying to research in model checking, database theory, and computational complexity theory.

Professor Immerman is an editor of the SIAM Journal on Computing and of Logical Methods in Computer Science. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from Yale University in 1974 and his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1980 under the supervision of Juris Hartmanis, a Turing award winner at Cornell. His book "Descriptive Complexity" appeared in 1999.

Immerman is the winner, jointly with Róbert Szelepcsényi, of the 1995 Gödel Prize in theoretical computer science for proof of what is known as the Immerman–Szelepcsényi theorem, the result that nondeterministic space complexity classes are closed under complementation. Immerman is an ACM Fellow and a Guggenheim Fellow.

References

Neil Immerman Wikipedia