Benjamin Weiss
Benjamin Weiss
- Benjamin Weiss** (; born 1941) is an American-Israeli mathematician known for his contributions to ergodic theory, topological dynamics, probability theory, [[game-theory]], and descriptive set theory. In 2026, he received the Israel Prize for mathematics and computer science research.
Biography Benjamin ("Benjy") Weiss was born in New York City. In 1962 he received B.A. from Yeshiva University and M.A. from the Graduate School of Science, Yeshiva University. In 1965, he received his Ph.D. from Princeton under the supervision of William Feller.
Academic career Between 1965 and 1967, Weiss worked at the IBM Research. In 1967, he joined the faculty of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; and since 1990 occupied the Miriam and Julius Vinik Chair in Mathematics (Emeritus since 2009). Weiss held visiting positions at Stanford, MSRI, and IBM Research Center.
Weiss published over 180 papers in ergodic theory, topological dynamics, orbit equivalence, probability, information theory, game-theory, descriptive set theory; with notable contributions including introduction of Markov partitions (with Roy Adler), development of ergodic theory of amenable groups (with Don Ornstein), mean dimension (with Elon Lindenstrauss), introduction of sofic subshifts and sofic groups. The road coloring conjecture was also posed by Weiss with Roy Adler.
One of Weiss's students is Elon Lindenstrauss, a 2010 recipient of the Fields Medal.