Marc Scott Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

High Impact

Professor of Applied Statistics

University of Arkansas at Fayetteville

faculty

mscott2@stonehill.edu

21 h-index 131 pubs 2,061 cited

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Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Marc Scott is a Professor of Applied Statistics at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. His research interests span several areas, including child development, health, and supply chain management. He has published work examining appetite traits in infants and toddlers and their relationship to weight and obesity risk, particularly in low-income Hispanic families. His research also investigates the protective effects of prenatal social support on the intergenerational transmission of obesity. Scott has explored interventions for speech sound disorder and the role of cognitive stimulation in parents during infancy and toddlerhood.

In addition to health-related research, Scott has investigated aspects of supply chain management, including competitive dynamics in service portfolio diversification for third-party logistics providers and the empirical examination of product launch performance in emerging markets. He has also contributed to research on the application of prescriptive data and non-linear dimension-reduction methods in spare part classification.

Scott's scholarly contributions are reflected in his h-index of 21 and over 2,000 citations across more than 130 publications. He has served as Co-PI on a significant NSF grant totaling nearly $6 million for a Membrane Purification Platform for Continuous Biomanufacturing of Viral Vectors and Virus-like Particles. His collaborators include Brian S. Fugate, Adriana Rossiter Hofer, and Matthew A. Waller, all from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville.

Metrics

  • h-index: 21
  • Publications: 131
  • Citations: 2,061

Selected Publications

  • : <i>Richard Burbage and the Shakespearean Stage: A ‘Delightful Proteus.’</i> (2026) DOI
  • When Safety Technologies Backfire: How Monitoring Affects Drivers' Safety Behavior (2026) DOI
  • :<i>Shakespeare’s Tragic Art</i> (2025) DOI
  • Employee and Customer Information Privacy Concerns in Supply Chain Management (2024) DOI
  • Investigating the effects of customer traits on preference for last‐mile delivery service attributes: When the product introduces a task (2024) DOI
  • Supply chain resource orchestration in emerging markets: an empirical examination of product launch performance (2023) DOI
  • The role of prescriptive data and non-linear dimension-reduction methods in spare part classification (2022) DOI
  • The Air Transportation Industry: Economic Conflict and Competition (2022) DOI

Federal Grants 1 $5,999,758 total

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