TY - GEN AB - We provide i) gridded initial conditions (.tif), ii) modeled gridded monthly outputs (.tif), and iii) modeled hourly outputs at the station locations (.txt) for the hydrological year 2019. Information about the variables and units can be found in the figures (.png) associated to each dataset. Details about the datasets can be found in the original publication by Buri and others (2023). Buri, P., Fatichi, S., Shaw, T. E., Miles, E. S., McCarthy, M. J., Fyffe, C. L., ... & Pellicciotti, F. (2023). Land Surface Modeling in the Himalayas: On the Importance of Evaporative Fluxes for the Water Balance of a High‐Elevation Catchment. Water Resources Research, 59(10), e2022WR033841. DOI: 10.1029/2022WR033841 AU - Buri, Pascal AU - Fatichi, Simone AU - Shaw, Thomas AU - Miles, Evan AU - McCarthy, Michael AU - Fyffe, Catriona Louise AU - Fugger, Stefan AU - Ren, Shaoting AU - Kneib, Marin AU - Jouberton, Achille AU - Steiner, Jakob AU - Fujita, Koji AU - Pellicciotti, Francesca ID - 14494 TI - Model output data to "Land surface modeling in the Himalayas: on the importance of evaporative fluxes for the water balance of a high elevation catchment" ER - TY - DATA AB - We introduce a stochastic cellular automaton as a model for culture and border formation. The model can be conceptualized as a game where the expansion rate of cultures is quantified in terms of their area and perimeter in such a way that approximately round cultures get a competitive advantage. We first analyse the model with periodic boundary conditions, where we study how the model can end up in a fixed state, i.e. freezes. Then we implement the model on the European geography with mountains and rivers. We see how the model reproduces some qualitative features of European culture formation, namely that rivers and mountains are more frequently borders between cultures, mountainous regions tend to have higher cultural diversity and the central European plain has less clear cultural borders. AU - Klausen, Frederik Ravn AU - Lauritsen, Asbjørn Bækgaard ID - 12869 TI - Research data for: A stochastic cellular automaton model of culture formation ER - TY - GEN AB - see Readme file AU - Binysh, Jack AU - Chakraborty, Indrajit AU - Chubynsky, Mykyta AU - Diaz Melian, Vicente L AU - Waitukaitis, Scott R AU - Sprittles, James AU - Souslov, Anton ID - 14523 TI - SouslovLab/PRL2023-ModellingLeidenfrostLevitationofSoftElasticSolids: v1.0.1 ER - TY - GEN AB - This is associated with our paper "Plant size, latitude, and phylogeny explain within-population variability in herbivory" published in Science. AU - Wetzel, William ID - 14579 TI - HerbVar-Network/HV-Large-Patterns-MS-public: v1.0.0 ER - TY - DATA AB - Regulation of the Arp2/3 complex is required for productive nucleation of branched actin networks. An emerging aspect of regulation is the incorporation of subunit isoforms into the Arp2/3 complex. Specifically, both ArpC5 subunit isoforms, ArpC5 and ArpC5L, have been reported to fine-tune nucleation activity and branch junction stability. We have combined reverse genetics and cellular structural biology to describe how ArpC5 and ArpC5L differentially affect cell migration. Both define the structural stability of ArpC1 in branch junctions and, in turn, by determining protrusion characteristics, affect protein dynamics and actin network ultrastructure. ArpC5 isoforms also affect the positioning of members of the Ena/Vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP) family of actin filament elongators, which mediate ArpC5 isoform–specific effects on the actin assembly level. Our results suggest that ArpC5 and Ena/VASP proteins are part of a signaling pathway enhancing cell migration. AU - Schur, Florian KM ID - 14562 TI - Research data of the publication "ArpC5 isoforms regulate Arp2/3 complex-dependent protrusion through differential Ena/VASP positioning" ER -