---
_id: '9962'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: The brain is one of the largest and most complex organs and it is composed
of billions of neurons that communicate together enabling e.g. consciousness.
The cerebral cortex is the largest site of neural integration in the central nervous
system. Concerted radial migration of newly born cortical projection neurons,
from their birthplace to their final position, is a key step in the assembly of
the cerebral cortex. The cellular and molecular mechanisms regulating radial neuronal
migration in vivo are however still unclear. Recent evidence suggests that distinct
signaling cues act cell-autonomously but differentially at certain steps during
the overall migration process. Moreover, functional analysis of genetic mosaics
(mutant neurons present in wild-type/heterozygote environment) using the MADM
(Mosaic Analysis with Double Markers) analyses in comparison to global knockout
also indicate a significant degree of non-cell-autonomous and/or community effects
in the control of cortical neuron migration. The interactions of cell-intrinsic
(cell-autonomous) and cell-extrinsic (non-cell-autonomous) components are largely
unknown. In part of this thesis work we established a MADM-based experimental
strategy for the quantitative analysis of cell-autonomous gene function versus
non-cell-autonomous and/or community effects. The direct comparison of mutant
neurons from the genetic mosaic (cell-autonomous) to mutant neurons in the conditional
and/or global knockout (cell-autonomous + non-cell-autonomous) allows to quantitatively
analyze non-cell-autonomous effects. Such analysis enable the high-resolution
analysis of projection neuron migration dynamics in distinct environments with
concomitant isolation of genomic and proteomic profiles. Using these experimental
paradigms and in combination with computational modeling we show and characterize
the nature of non-cell-autonomous effects to coordinate radial neuron migration.
Furthermore, this thesis discusses recent developments in neurodevelopment with
focus on neuronal polarization and non-cell-autonomous mechanisms in neuronal
migration.
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Andi H
full_name: Hansen, Andi H
id: 38853E16-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Hansen
citation:
ama: Hansen AH. Cell-autonomous gene function and non-cell-autonomous effects in
radial projection neuron migration. 2021. doi:10.15479/at:ista:9962
apa: Hansen, A. H. (2021). Cell-autonomous gene function and non-cell-autonomous
effects in radial projection neuron migration. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:9962
chicago: Hansen, Andi H. “Cell-Autonomous Gene Function and Non-Cell-Autonomous
Effects in Radial Projection Neuron Migration.” Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2021. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:9962.
ieee: A. H. Hansen, “Cell-autonomous gene function and non-cell-autonomous effects
in radial projection neuron migration,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria,
2021.
ista: Hansen AH. 2021. Cell-autonomous gene function and non-cell-autonomous effects
in radial projection neuron migration. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Hansen, Andi H. Cell-Autonomous Gene Function and Non-Cell-Autonomous Effects
in Radial Projection Neuron Migration. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2021, doi:10.15479/at:ista:9962.
short: A.H. Hansen, Cell-Autonomous Gene Function and Non-Cell-Autonomous Effects
in Radial Projection Neuron Migration, Institute of Science and Technology Austria,
2021.
date_created: 2021-08-29T12:36:50Z
date_published: 2021-09-02T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-22T09:58:30Z
day: '02'
ddc:
- '570'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: GradSch
- _id: SiHi
doi: 10.15479/at:ista:9962
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: 66b56f5b988b233dc66a4f4b4fb2cdfe
content_type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
creator: ahansen
date_created: 2021-08-30T09:17:39Z
date_updated: 2022-09-03T22:30:04Z
embargo_to: open_access
file_id: '9971'
file_name: Thesis_Hansen.docx
file_size: 10629190
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 204fa40321a1c6289b68c473634c4bf3
content_type: application/pdf
creator: ahansen
date_created: 2021-08-30T09:29:44Z
date_updated: 2022-09-03T22:30:04Z
embargo: 2022-09-02
file_id: '9972'
file_name: Thesis_Hansen_PDFA-1a.pdf
file_size: 13457469
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2022-09-03T22:30:04Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
keyword:
- Neuronal migration
- Non-cell-autonomous
- Cell-autonomous
- Neurodevelopmental disease
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '182'
project:
- _id: 2625A13E-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
grant_number: '24812'
name: Molecular Mechanisms of Radial Neuronal Migration
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '8569'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '960'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Simon
full_name: Hippenmeyer, Simon
id: 37B36620-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Hippenmeyer
orcid: 0000-0003-2279-1061
title: Cell-autonomous gene function and non-cell-autonomous effects in radial projection
neuron migration
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)
short: CC BY (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2021'
...
---
_id: '10083'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Plant motions occur across a wide spectrum of timescales, ranging from seed
dispersal through bursting (milliseconds) and stomatal opening (minutes) to long-term
adaptation of gross architecture. Relatively fast motions include water-driven
growth as exemplified by root cell expansion under abiotic/biotic stresses or
during gravitropism. A showcase is a root growth inhibition in 30 seconds triggered
by the phytohormone auxin. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms are
still largely unknown. This thesis covers the studies about this topic as follows.
By taking advantage of microfluidics combined with live imaging, pharmaceutical
tools, and transgenic lines, we examined the kinetics of and causal relationship
among various auxininduced rapid cellular changes in root growth, apoplastic pH,
cytosolic Ca2+, cortical microtubule (CMT) orientation, and vacuolar morphology.
We revealed that CMT reorientation and vacuolar constriction are the consequence
of growth itself instead of responding directly to auxin. In contrast, auxin induces
apoplast alkalinization to rapidly inhibit root growth in 30 seconds. This auxin-triggered
apoplast alkalinization results from rapid H+- influx that is contributed by Ca2+
inward channel CYCLIC NUCLEOTIDE-GATED CHANNEL 14 (CNGC14)-dependent Ca2+ signaling.
To dissect which auxin signaling mediates the rapid apoplast alkalinization, we\r\ncombined
microfluidics and genetic engineering to verify that TIR1/AFB receptors conduct
a non-transcriptional regulation on Ca2+ and H+ -influx. This non-canonical pathway
is mostly mediated by the cytosolic portion of TIR1/AFB. On the other hand, we
uncovered, using biochemical and phospho-proteomic analysis, that auxin cell surface
signaling component TRANSMEMBRANE KINASE 1 (TMK1) plays a negative role during
auxin-trigger apoplast\r\nalkalinization and root growth inhibition through directly
activating PM H+ -ATPases. Therefore, we discovered that PM H+ -ATPases counteract
instead of mediate the auxintriggered rapid H+ -influx, and that TIR1/AFB and
TMK1 regulate root growth antagonistically. This opposite effect of TIR1/AFB and
TMK1 is consistent during auxin-induced hypocotyl elongation, leading us to explore
the relation of two signaling pathways. Assisted with biochemistry and fluorescent
imaging, we verified for the first time that TIR1/AFB and TMK1 can interact with
each other. The ability of TIR1/AFB binding to membrane lipid provides a basis
for the interaction of plasma membrane- and cytosol-localized proteins.\r\nBesides,
transgenic analysis combined with genetic engineering and biochemistry showed
that vi\r\nthey do function in the same pathway. Particularly, auxin-induced
TMK1 increase is TIR1/AFB dependent, suggesting TIR1/AFB regulation on TMK1. Conversely,
TMK1 also regulates TIR1/AFB protein levels and thus auxin canonical signaling.
To follow the study of rapid growth regulation, we analyzed another rapid growth
regulator, signaling peptide RALF1. We showed that RALF1 also triggers a rapid
and reversible growth inhibition caused by H + influx, highly resembling but not
dependent on auxin. Besides, RALF1 promotes auxin biosynthesis by increasing expression
of auxin biosynthesis enzyme YUCCAs and thus induces auxin signaling in ca. 1
hour, contributing to the sustained RALF1-triggered growth inhibition. These studies
collectively contribute to understanding rapid regulation on plant cell\r\ngrowth,
novel auxin signaling pathway as well as auxin-peptide crosstalk. "
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Lanxin
full_name: Li, Lanxin
last_name: Li
citation:
ama: Li L. Rapid cell growth regulation in Arabidopsis. 2021. doi:10.15479/at:ista:10083
apa: Li, L. (2021). Rapid cell growth regulation in Arabidopsis. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:10083
chicago: Li, Lanxin. “Rapid Cell Growth Regulation in Arabidopsis.” Institute of
Science and Technology Austria, 2021. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:10083.
ieee: L. Li, “Rapid cell growth regulation in Arabidopsis,” Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2021.
ista: Li L. 2021. Rapid cell growth regulation in Arabidopsis. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria.
mla: Li, Lanxin. Rapid Cell Growth Regulation in Arabidopsis. Institute of
Science and Technology Austria, 2021, doi:10.15479/at:ista:10083.
short: L. Li, Rapid Cell Growth Regulation in Arabidopsis, Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2021.
date_created: 2021-10-04T13:33:10Z
date_published: 2021-10-06T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-10-31T19:30:02Z
day: '06'
ddc:
- '575'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: GradSch
- _id: JiFr
doi: 10.15479/at:ista:10083
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 3b2f55b3b8ae05337a0dcc1cd8595b10
content_type: application/pdf
creator: cchlebak
date_created: 2021-10-14T08:00:07Z
date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:03Z
embargo: 2022-10-14
file_id: '10138'
file_name: 0._IST_Austria_Thesis_Lanxin_Li_1014_pdftron.pdf
file_size: 8616142
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: f23ed258ca894f6aabf58b0c128bf242
content_type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
creator: cchlebak
date_created: 2021-10-14T08:00:13Z
date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:03Z
embargo_to: open_access
file_id: '10139'
file_name: 0._IST_Austria_Thesis_Lanxin_Li_1014.docx
file_size: 15058499
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:03Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '10'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
project:
- _id: 2564DBCA-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '665385'
name: International IST Doctoral Program
- _id: 26B4D67E-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
grant_number: '25351'
name: 'A Case Study of Plant Growth Regulation: Molecular Mechanism of Auxin-mediated
Rapid Growth Inhibition in Arabidopsis Root'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '442'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '8931'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '9287'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '8283'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '8986'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '6627'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '10095'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '10015'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Jiří
full_name: Friml, Jiří
id: 4159519E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Friml
orcid: 0000-0002-8302-7596
title: Rapid cell growth regulation in Arabidopsis
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by_nc_nd.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
(CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
short: CC BY-NC-ND (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2021'
...
---
_id: '10293'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Indirect reciprocity in evolutionary game theory is a prominent mechanism
for explaining the evolution of cooperation among unrelated individuals. In contrast
to direct reciprocity, which is based on individuals meeting repeatedly, and conditionally
cooperating by using their own experiences, indirect reciprocity is based on individuals’
reputations. If a player helps another, this increases the helper’s public standing,
benefitting them in the future. This lets cooperation in the population emerge
without individuals having to meet more than once. While the two modes of reciprocity
are intertwined, they are difficult to compare. Thus, they are usually studied
in isolation. Direct reciprocity can maintain cooperation with simple strategies,
and is robust against noise even when players do not remember more\r\nthan their
partner’s last action. Meanwhile, indirect reciprocity requires its successful
strategies, or social norms, to be more complex. Exhaustive search previously
identified eight such norms, called the “leading eight”, which excel at maintaining
cooperation. However, as the first result of this thesis, we show that the leading
eight break down once we remove the fundamental assumption that information is
synchronized and public, such that everyone agrees on reputations. Once we consider
a more realistic scenario of imperfect information, where reputations are private,
and individuals occasionally misinterpret or miss observations, the leading eight
do not promote cooperation anymore. Instead, minor initial disagreements can proliferate,
fragmenting populations into subgroups. In a next step, we consider ways to mitigate
this issue. We first explore whether introducing “generosity” can stabilize cooperation
when players use the leading eight strategies in noisy environments. This approach
of modifying strategies to include probabilistic elements for coping with errors
is known to work well in direct reciprocity. However, as we show here, it fails
for the more complex norms of indirect reciprocity. Imperfect information still
prevents cooperation from evolving. On the other hand, we succeeded to show in
this thesis that modifying the leading eight to use “quantitative assessment”,
i.e. tracking reputation scores on a scale beyond good and bad, and making overall
judgments of others based on a threshold, is highly successful, even when noise
increases in the environment. Cooperation can flourish when reputations\r\nare
more nuanced, and players have a broader understanding what it means to be “good.”
Finally, we present a single theoretical framework that unites the two modes of
reciprocity despite their differences. Within this framework, we identify a novel
simple and successful strategy for indirect reciprocity, which can cope with noisy
environments and has an analogue in direct reciprocity. We can also analyze decision
making when different sources of information are available. Our results help highlight
that for sustaining cooperation, already the most simple rules of reciprocity
can be sufficient."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Laura
full_name: Schmid, Laura
id: 38B437DE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Schmid
orcid: 0000-0002-6978-7329
citation:
ama: Schmid L. Evolution of cooperation via (in)direct reciprocity under imperfect
information. 2021. doi:10.15479/at:ista:10293
apa: Schmid, L. (2021). Evolution of cooperation via (in)direct reciprocity under
imperfect information. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:10293
chicago: Schmid, Laura. “Evolution of Cooperation via (in)Direct Reciprocity under
Imperfect Information.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:10293.
ieee: L. Schmid, “Evolution of cooperation via (in)direct reciprocity under imperfect
information,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021.
ista: Schmid L. 2021. Evolution of cooperation via (in)direct reciprocity under
imperfect information. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Schmid, Laura. Evolution of Cooperation via (in)Direct Reciprocity under
Imperfect Information. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021,
doi:10.15479/at:ista:10293.
short: L. Schmid, Evolution of Cooperation via (in)Direct Reciprocity under Imperfect
Information, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021.
date_created: 2021-11-15T17:12:57Z
date_published: 2021-11-17T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-11-07T08:28:29Z
day: '17'
ddc:
- '519'
- '576'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: GradSch
- _id: KrCh
doi: 10.15479/at:ista:10293
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: 86a05b430756ca12ae8107b6e6f3c1e5
content_type: application/zip
creator: lschmid
date_created: 2021-11-18T12:41:46Z
date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:08Z
embargo_to: open_access
file_id: '10305'
file_name: submission_new.zip
file_size: 29703124
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: d940af042e94660c6b6a7b4f0b184d47
content_type: application/pdf
creator: lschmid
date_created: 2021-11-18T12:59:15Z
date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:08Z
embargo: 2022-10-18
file_id: '10306'
file_name: thesis_new_upload.pdf
file_size: 8320985
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:08Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '11'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '171'
project:
- _id: 2581B60A-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: FP7
grant_number: '279307'
name: 'Quantitative Graph Games: Theory and Applications'
- _id: 0599E47C-7A3F-11EA-A408-12923DDC885E
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '863818'
name: 'Formal Methods for Stochastic Models: Algorithms and Applications'
- _id: 25F42A32-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: FWF
grant_number: Z211
name: The Wittgenstein Prize
- _id: 2584A770-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: FWF
grant_number: P 23499-N23
name: Modern Graph Algorithmic Techniques in Formal Verification
- _id: 25832EC2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: FWF
grant_number: S 11407_N23
name: Rigorous Systems Engineering
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '9997'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '2'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '9402'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Krishnendu
full_name: Chatterjee, Krishnendu
id: 2E5DCA20-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Chatterjee
orcid: 0000-0002-4561-241X
title: Evolution of cooperation via (in)direct reciprocity under imperfect information
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2021'
...
---
_id: '10135'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Plants maintain the capacity to develop new organs e.g. lateral roots post-embryonically
throughout their whole life and thereby flexibly adapt to ever-changing environmental
conditions. Plant hormones auxin and cytokinin are the main regulators of the
lateral root organogenesis. Additionally to their solo activities, the interaction
between auxin and\r\ncytokinin plays crucial role in fine-tuning of lateral root
development and growth. In particular, cytokinin modulates auxin distribution
within the developing lateral root by affecting the endomembrane trafficking of
auxin transporter PIN1 and promoting its vacuolar degradation (Marhavý et al.,
2011, 2014). This effect is independent of transcription and\r\ntranslation. Therefore,
it suggests novel, non-canonical cytokinin activity occuring possibly on the posttranslational
level. Impact of cytokinin and other plant hormones on auxin transporters (including
PIN1) on the posttranslational level is described in detail in the introduction
part of this thesis in a form of a review (Semeradova et al., 2020). To gain insights
into the molecular machinery underlying cytokinin effect on the endomembrane trafficking
in the plant cell, in particular on the PIN1 degradation, we conducted two large
proteomic screens: 1) Identification of cytokinin binding proteins using\r\nchemical
proteomics. 2) Monitoring of proteomic and phosphoproteomic changes upon cytokinin
treatment. In the first screen, we identified DYNAMIN RELATED PROTEIN 2A (DRP2A).
We found that DRP2A plays a role in cytokinin regulated processes during the plant
growth and that cytokinin treatment promotes destabilization of DRP2A protein.
However, the role of DRP2A in the PIN1 degradation remains to be elucidated. In
the second screen, we found VACUOLAR PROTEIN SORTING 9A (VPS9A). VPS9a plays crucial
role in plant’s response to cytokin and in cytokinin mediated PIN1 degradation.
Altogether, we identified proteins, which bind to cytokinin and proteins that
in response to\r\ncytokinin exhibit significantly changed abundance or phosphorylation
pattern. By combining information from these two screens, we can pave our way
towards understanding of noncanonical cytokinin effects."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Hana
full_name: Semerádová, Hana
id: 42FE702E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Semerádová
citation:
ama: Semerádová H. Molecular mechanisms of the cytokinin-regulated endomembrane
trafficking to coordinate plant organogenesis. 2021. doi:10.15479/at:ista:10135
apa: Semerádová, H. (2021). Molecular mechanisms of the cytokinin-regulated endomembrane
trafficking to coordinate plant organogenesis. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:10135
chicago: Semerádová, Hana. “Molecular Mechanisms of the Cytokinin-Regulated Endomembrane
Trafficking to Coordinate Plant Organogenesis.” Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2021. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:10135.
ieee: H. Semerádová, “Molecular mechanisms of the cytokinin-regulated endomembrane
trafficking to coordinate plant organogenesis,” Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2021.
ista: Semerádová H. 2021. Molecular mechanisms of the cytokinin-regulated endomembrane
trafficking to coordinate plant organogenesis. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria.
mla: Semerádová, Hana. Molecular Mechanisms of the Cytokinin-Regulated Endomembrane
Trafficking to Coordinate Plant Organogenesis. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2021, doi:10.15479/at:ista:10135.
short: H. Semerádová, Molecular Mechanisms of the Cytokinin-Regulated Endomembrane
Trafficking to Coordinate Plant Organogenesis, Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2021.
date_created: 2021-10-13T13:42:48Z
date_published: 2021-10-13T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2024-01-25T10:53:29Z
day: '13'
ddc:
- '570'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: GradSch
- _id: EvBe
doi: 10.15479/at:ista:10135
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: ce7108853e6cec6224f17cd6429b51fe
content_type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
creator: cziletti
date_created: 2021-10-27T07:45:37Z
date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:05Z
embargo_to: open_access
file_id: '10186'
file_name: Hana_Semeradova_Disertation_Thesis_II_Revised_3.docx
file_size: 28508629
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 0d7afb846e8e31ec794de47bf44e12ef
content_type: application/pdf
creator: cziletti
date_created: 2021-10-27T07:45:57Z
date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:05Z
embargo: 2022-10-28
file_id: '10187'
file_name: Hana_Semeradova_Disertation_Thesis_II_Revised_3PDFA.pdf
file_size: 10623525
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2022-12-20T23:30:05Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '10'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
project:
- _id: 261821BC-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
grant_number: '24746'
name: Molecular mechanisms of the cytokinin regulated endomembrane trafficking to
coordinate plant organogenesis.
publication_identifier:
isbn:
- 978-3-99078-014-5
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '9160'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Eva
full_name: Benková, Eva
id: 38F4F166-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Benková
orcid: 0000-0002-8510-9739
title: Molecular mechanisms of the cytokinin-regulated endomembrane trafficking to
coordinate plant organogenesis
type: dissertation
user_id: 8b945eb4-e2f2-11eb-945a-df72226e66a9
year: '2021'
...
---
_id: '9728'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Most real-world flows are multiphase, yet we know little about them compared
to their single-phase counterparts. Multiphase flows are more difficult to investigate
as their dynamics occur in large parameter space and involve complex phenomena
such as preferential concentration, turbulence modulation, non-Newtonian rheology,
etc. Over the last few decades, experiments in particle-laden flows have taken
a back seat in favour of ever-improving computational resources. However, computers
are still not powerful enough to simulate a real-world fluid with millions of
finite-size particles. Experiments are essential not only because they offer a
reliable way to investigate real-world multiphase flows but also because they
serve to validate numerical studies and steer the research in a relevant direction.
In this work, we have experimentally investigated particle-laden flows in pipes,
and in particular, examined the effect of particles on the laminar-turbulent transition
and the drag scaling in turbulent flows.\r\n\r\nFor particle-laden pipe flows,
an earlier study [Matas et al., 2003] reported how the sub-critical (i.e., hysteretic)
transition that occurs via localised turbulent structures called puffs is affected
by the addition of particles. In this study, in addition to this known transition,
we found a super-critical transition to a globally fluctuating state with increasing
particle concentration. At the same time, the Newtonian-type transition via puffs
is delayed to larger Reynolds numbers. At an even higher concentration, only the
globally fluctuating state is found. The dynamics of particle-laden flows are
hence determined by two competing instabilities that give rise to three flow regimes:
Newtonian-type turbulence at low, a particle-induced globally fluctuating state
at high, and a coexistence state at intermediate concentrations.\r\n\r\nThe effect
of particles on turbulent drag is ambiguous, with studies reporting drag reduction,
no net change, and even drag increase. The ambiguity arises because, in addition
to particle concentration, particle shape, size, and density also affect the net
drag. Even similar particles might affect the flow dissimilarly in different Reynolds
number and concentration ranges. In the present study, we explored a wide range
of both Reynolds number and concentration, using spherical as well as cylindrical
particles. We found that the spherical particles do not reduce drag while the
cylindrical particles are drag-reducing within a specific Reynolds number interval.
The interval strongly depends on the particle concentration and the relative size
of the pipe and particles. Within this interval, the magnitude of drag reduction
reaches a maximum. These drag reduction maxima appear to fall onto a distinct
power-law curve irrespective of the pipe diameter and particle concentration,
and this curve can be considered as the maximum drag reduction asymptote for a
given fibre shape. Such an asymptote is well known for polymeric flows but had
not been identified for particle-laden flows prior to this work."
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: M-Shop
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Nishchal
full_name: Agrawal, Nishchal
id: 469E6004-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Agrawal
citation:
ama: Agrawal N. Transition to turbulence and drag reduction in particle-laden pipe
flows. 2021. doi:10.15479/at:ista:9728
apa: Agrawal, N. (2021). Transition to turbulence and drag reduction in particle-laden
pipe flows. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:9728
chicago: Agrawal, Nishchal. “Transition to Turbulence and Drag Reduction in Particle-Laden
Pipe Flows.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:9728.
ieee: N. Agrawal, “Transition to turbulence and drag reduction in particle-laden
pipe flows,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021.
ista: Agrawal N. 2021. Transition to turbulence and drag reduction in particle-laden
pipe flows. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Agrawal, Nishchal. Transition to Turbulence and Drag Reduction in Particle-Laden
Pipe Flows. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021, doi:10.15479/at:ista:9728.
short: N. Agrawal, Transition to Turbulence and Drag Reduction in Particle-Laden
Pipe Flows, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2021.
date_created: 2021-07-27T13:40:30Z
date_published: 2021-07-29T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2024-02-28T13:14:39Z
day: '29'
ddc:
- '532'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: GradSch
- _id: BjHo
doi: 10.15479/at:ista:9728
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: 77436be3563a90435024307b1b5ee7e8
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: nagrawal
date_created: 2021-07-28T13:32:02Z
date_updated: 2022-07-29T22:30:05Z
embargo_to: open_access
file_id: '9744'
file_name: Transition to Turbulence and Drag Reduction in Particle-Laden Pipe Flows.zip
file_size: 22859658
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 72a891d7daba85445c29b868c22575ed
content_type: application/pdf
creator: nagrawal
date_created: 2021-07-28T13:32:05Z
date_updated: 2022-07-29T22:30:05Z
embargo: 2022-07-28
file_id: '9745'
file_name: Transition to Turbulence and Drag Reduction in Particle-Laden Pipe Flows.pdf
file_size: 18658048
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2022-07-29T22:30:05Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
keyword:
- Drag Reduction
- Transition to Turbulence
- Multiphase Flows
- particle Laden Flows
- Complex Flows
- Experiments
- Fluid Dynamics
language:
- iso: eng
month: '07'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '118'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '6189'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Björn
full_name: Hof, Björn
id: 3A374330-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Hof
orcid: 0000-0003-2057-2754
title: Transition to turbulence and drag reduction in particle-laden pipe flows
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)
short: CC BY (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2021'
...
---
_id: '7629'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "This thesis is based on three main topics: In the first part, we study convergence
of discrete gradient flow structures associated with regular finite-volume discretisations
of Fokker-Planck equations. We show evolutionary I convergence of the discrete
gradient flows to the L2-Wasserstein gradient flow corresponding to the solution
of a Fokker-Planck\r\nequation in arbitrary dimension d >= 1. Along the argument,
we prove Mosco- and I-convergence results for discrete energy functionals, which
are of independent interest for convergence of equivalent gradient flow structures
in Hilbert spaces.\r\nThe second part investigates L2-Wasserstein flows on metric
graph. The starting point is a Benamou-Brenier formula for the L2-Wasserstein
distance, which is proved via a regularisation scheme for solutions of the continuity
equation, adapted to the peculiar geometric structure of metric graphs. Based
on those results, we show that the L2-Wasserstein space over a metric graph admits
a gradient flow which may be identified as a solution of a Fokker-Planck equation.\r\nIn
the third part, we focus again on the discrete gradient flows, already encountered
in the first part. We propose a variational structure which extends the gradient
flow structure to Markov chains violating the detailed-balance conditions. Using
this structure, we characterise contraction estimates for the discrete heat flow
in terms of convexity of\r\ncorresponding path-dependent energy functionals. In
addition, we use this approach to derive several functional inequalities for said
functionals."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Dominik L
full_name: Forkert, Dominik L
id: 35C79D68-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Forkert
citation:
ama: Forkert DL. Gradient flows in spaces of probability measures for finite-volume
schemes, metric graphs and non-reversible Markov chains. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7629
apa: Forkert, D. L. (2020). Gradient flows in spaces of probability measures
for finite-volume schemes, metric graphs and non-reversible Markov chains.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7629
chicago: Forkert, Dominik L. “Gradient Flows in Spaces of Probability Measures for
Finite-Volume Schemes, Metric Graphs and Non-Reversible Markov Chains.” Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7629.
ieee: D. L. Forkert, “Gradient flows in spaces of probability measures for finite-volume
schemes, metric graphs and non-reversible Markov chains,” Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Forkert DL. 2020. Gradient flows in spaces of probability measures for finite-volume
schemes, metric graphs and non-reversible Markov chains. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria.
mla: Forkert, Dominik L. Gradient Flows in Spaces of Probability Measures for
Finite-Volume Schemes, Metric Graphs and Non-Reversible Markov Chains. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7629.
short: D.L. Forkert, Gradient Flows in Spaces of Probability Measures for Finite-Volume
Schemes, Metric Graphs and Non-Reversible Markov Chains, Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-04-02T06:40:23Z
date_published: 2020-03-31T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:03:12Z
day: '31'
ddc:
- '510'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: JaMa
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:7629
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: c814a1a6195269ca6fe48b0dca45ae8a
content_type: application/pdf
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-04-14T10:47:59Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:01Z
file_id: '7657'
file_name: Thesis_Forkert_PDFA.pdf
file_size: 3297129
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: ceafb53f923d1b5bdf14b2b0f22e4a81
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-04-14T10:47:59Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:01Z
file_id: '7658'
file_name: Thesis_Forkert_source.zip
file_size: 1063908
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:01Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '03'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '154'
project:
- _id: 256E75B8-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '716117'
name: Optimal Transport and Stochastic Dynamics
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Jan
full_name: Maas, Jan
id: 4C5696CE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Maas
orcid: 0000-0002-0845-1338
title: Gradient flows in spaces of probability measures for finite-volume schemes,
metric graphs and non-reversible Markov chains
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8574'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "This thesis concerns itself with the interactions of evolutionary and ecological
forces and the consequences on genetic diversity and the ultimate survival of
populations. It is important to understand what signals processes \r\nleave on
the genome and what we can infer from such data, which is usually abundant but
noisy. Furthermore, understanding how and when populations adapt or go extinct
is important for practical purposes, such as the genetic management of populations,
as well as for theoretical questions, since local adaptation can be the first
step toward speciation. \r\nIn Chapter 2, we introduce the method of maximum entropy
to approximate the demographic changes of a population in a simple setting, namely
the logistic growth model with immigration. We show that this method is not only
a powerful \r\ntool in physics but can be gainfully applied in an ecological framework.
We investigate how well it approximates the real \r\nbehavior of the system, and
find that is does so, even in unexpected situations. Finally, we illustrate how
it can model changing environments.\r\nIn Chapter 3, we analyze the co-evolution
of allele frequencies and population sizes in an infinite island model.\r\nWe
give conditions under which polygenic adaptation to a rare habitat is possible.
The model we use is based on the diffusion approximation, considers eco-evolutionary
feedback mechanisms (hard selection), and treats both \r\ndrift and environmental
fluctuations explicitly. We also look at limiting scenarios, for which we derive
analytical expressions. \r\nIn Chapter 4, we present a coalescent based simulation
tool to obtain patterns of diversity in a spatially explicit subdivided population,
in which the demographic history of each subpopulation can be specified. We compare
\r\nthe results to existing predictions, and explore the relative importance of
time and space under a variety of spatial arrangements and demographic histories,
such as expansion and extinction. \r\nIn the last chapter, we give a brief outlook
to further research. "
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Eniko
full_name: Szep, Eniko
id: 485BB5A4-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Szep
citation:
ama: Szep E. Local adaptation in metapopulations. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8574
apa: Szep, E. (2020). Local adaptation in metapopulations. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8574
chicago: Szep, Eniko. “Local Adaptation in Metapopulations.” Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8574.
ieee: E. Szep, “Local adaptation in metapopulations,” Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2020.
ista: Szep E. 2020. Local adaptation in metapopulations. Institute of Science and
Technology Austria.
mla: Szep, Eniko. Local Adaptation in Metapopulations. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8574.
short: E. Szep, Local Adaptation in Metapopulations, Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-09-28T07:33:38Z
date_published: 2020-09-20T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:11:39Z
day: '20'
ddc:
- '570'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: NiBa
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8574
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 20e71f015fbbd78fea708893ad634ed0
content_type: application/pdf
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-09-28T07:25:35Z
date_updated: 2020-09-28T07:25:35Z
file_id: '8575'
file_name: thesis_EnikoSzep_final.pdf
file_size: 6354833
relation: main_file
success: 1
- access_level: closed
checksum: a8de2c14a1bb4e53c857787efbb289e1
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-09-28T07:25:37Z
date_updated: 2020-09-28T07:25:37Z
file_id: '8576'
file_name: thesisFiles_EnikoSzep.zip
file_size: 23020401
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-09-28T07:25:37Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '158'
publication_identifier:
eissn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Nicholas H
full_name: Barton, Nicholas H
id: 4880FE40-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Barton
orcid: 0000-0002-8548-5240
title: Local adaptation in metapopulations
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '7514'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "We study the interacting homogeneous Bose gas in two spatial dimensions in
the thermodynamic limit at fixed density. We shall be concerned with some mathematical
aspects of this complicated problem in many-body quantum mechanics. More specifically,
we consider the dilute limit where the scattering length of the interaction potential,
which is a measure for the effective range of the potential, is small compared
to the average distance between the particles. We are interested in a setting
with positive (i.e., non-zero) temperature. After giving a survey of the relevant
literature in the field, we provide some facts and examples to set expectations
for the two-dimensional system. The crucial difference to the three-dimensional
system is that there is no Bose–Einstein condensate at positive temperature due
to the Hohenberg–Mermin–Wagner theorem. However, it turns out that an asymptotic
formula for the free energy holds similarly to the three-dimensional case.\r\nWe
motivate this formula by considering a toy model with δ interaction potential.
By restricting this model Hamiltonian to certain trial states with a quasi-condensate
we obtain an upper bound for the free energy that still has the quasi-condensate
fraction as a free parameter. When minimizing over the quasi-condensate fraction,
we obtain the Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless critical temperature for superfluidity,
which plays an important role in our rigorous contribution. The mathematically
rigorous result that we prove concerns the specific free energy in the dilute
limit. We give upper and lower bounds on the free energy in terms of the free
energy of the non-interacting system and a correction term coming from the interaction.
Both bounds match and thus we obtain the leading term of an asymptotic approximation
in the dilute limit, provided the thermal wavelength of the particles is of the
same order (or larger) than the average distance between the particles. The remarkable
feature of this result is its generality: the correction term depends on the interaction
potential only through its scattering length and it holds for all nonnegative
interaction potentials with finite scattering length that are measurable. In particular,
this allows to model an interaction of hard disks."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Simon
full_name: Mayer, Simon
id: 30C4630A-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Mayer
citation:
ama: Mayer S. The free energy of a dilute two-dimensional Bose gas. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7514
apa: Mayer, S. (2020). The free energy of a dilute two-dimensional Bose gas.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7514
chicago: Mayer, Simon. “The Free Energy of a Dilute Two-Dimensional Bose Gas.” Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7514.
ieee: S. Mayer, “The free energy of a dilute two-dimensional Bose gas,” Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Mayer S. 2020. The free energy of a dilute two-dimensional Bose gas. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Mayer, Simon. The Free Energy of a Dilute Two-Dimensional Bose Gas.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7514.
short: S. Mayer, The Free Energy of a Dilute Two-Dimensional Bose Gas, Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-02-24T09:17:27Z
date_published: 2020-02-24T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:12:42Z
day: '24'
ddc:
- '510'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: RoSe
- _id: GradSch
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:7514
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: b4de7579ddc1dbdd44ff3f17c48395f6
content_type: application/pdf
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-02-24T09:15:06Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:47:59Z
file_id: '7515'
file_name: thesis.pdf
file_size: 1563429
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: ad7425867b52d7d9e72296e87bc9cb67
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-02-24T09:15:16Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:47:59Z
file_id: '7516'
file_name: thesis_source.zip
file_size: 2028038
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:47:59Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '02'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '148'
project:
- _id: 25C6DC12-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '694227'
name: Analysis of quantum many-body systems
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '7524'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Robert
full_name: Seiringer, Robert
id: 4AFD0470-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Seiringer
orcid: 0000-0002-6781-0521
title: The free energy of a dilute two-dimensional Bose gas
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)
short: CC BY (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8353'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Mrp (Multi resistance and pH adaptation) are broadly distributed secondary
active antiporters that catalyze the transport of monovalent ions such as sodium
and potassium outside of the cell coupled to the inward translocation of protons.
Mrp antiporters are unique in a way that they are composed of seven subunits (MrpABCDEFG)
encoded in a single operon, whereas other antiporters catalyzing the same reaction
are mostly encoded by a single gene. Mrp exchangers are crucial for intracellular
pH homeostasis and Na+ efflux, essential mechanisms for H+ uptake under alkaline
environments and for reduction of the intracellular concentration of toxic cations.
Mrp displays no homology to any other monovalent Na+(K+)/H+ antiporters but Mrp
subunits have primary sequence similarity to essential redox-driven proton pumps,
such as respiratory complex I and membrane-bound hydrogenases. This similarity
reinforces the hypothesis that these present day redox-driven proton pumps are
descended from the Mrp antiporter. The Mrp structure serves as a model to understand
the yet obscure coupling mechanism between ion or electron transfer and proton
translocation in this large group of proteins. In the thesis, I am presenting
the purification, biochemical analysis, cryo-EM analysis and molecular structure
of the Mrp complex from Anoxybacillus flavithermus solved by cryo-EM at 3.0 Å
resolution. Numerous conditions were screened to purify Mrp to high homogeneity
and to obtain an appropriate distribution of single particles on cryo-EM grids
covered with a continuous layer of ultrathin carbon. A preferred particle orientation
problem was solved by performing a tilted data collection. The activity assays
showed the specific pH-dependent\r\nprofile of secondary active antiporters. The
molecular structure shows that Mrp is a dimer of seven-subunit protomers with
50 trans-membrane helices each. The dimer interface is built by many short and
tilted transmembrane helices, probably causing a thinning of the bacterial membrane.
The surface charge distribution shows an extraordinary asymmetry within each monomer,
revealing presumable proton and sodium translocation pathways. The two largest\r\nand
homologous Mrp subunits MrpA and MrpD probably translocate one proton each into
the cell. The sodium ion is likely being translocated in the opposite direction
within the small subunits along a ladder of charged and conserved residues. Based
on the structure, we propose a mechanism were the antiport activity is accomplished
via electrostatic interactions between the charged cations and key charged residues.
The flexible key TM helices coordinate these\r\nelectrostatic interactions, while
the membrane thinning between the monomers enables the translocation of sodium
across the charged membrane. The entire family of redox-driven proton pumps is
likely to perform their mechanism in a likewise manner."
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: LifeSc
- _id: EM-Fac
- _id: ScienComp
acknowledgement: "I acknowledge the scientific service units of the IST Austria for
providing resources by the Life Science Facility, the Electron Microscopy Facility
and the high-performance computer cluster. Special thanks to the cryo-EM specialists
Valentin Hodirnau and Daniel Johann Gütl for spending many hours with me in front
of the microscope and for supporting me to collect the data presented here. I also
want to thank Professor Masahiro Ito for providing plasmid DNA\r\nencoding Mrp from
Anoxybacillus flavithermus WK1. I am a recipient of a DOC Fellowship of the Austrian
Academy of Sciences."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Julia
full_name: Steiner, Julia
id: 3BB67EB0-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Steiner
orcid: 0000-0003-0493-3775
citation:
ama: Steiner J. Biochemical and structural investigation of the Mrp antiporter,
an ancestor of complex I. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8353
apa: Steiner, J. (2020). Biochemical and structural investigation of the Mrp
antiporter, an ancestor of complex I. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8353
chicago: Steiner, Julia. “Biochemical and Structural Investigation of the Mrp Antiporter,
an Ancestor of Complex I.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8353.
ieee: J. Steiner, “Biochemical and structural investigation of the Mrp antiporter,
an ancestor of complex I,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Steiner J. 2020. Biochemical and structural investigation of the Mrp antiporter,
an ancestor of complex I. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Steiner, Julia. Biochemical and Structural Investigation of the Mrp Antiporter,
an Ancestor of Complex I. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020,
doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8353.
short: J. Steiner, Biochemical and Structural Investigation of the Mrp Antiporter,
an Ancestor of Complex I, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-09-09T14:27:01Z
date_published: 2020-09-09T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:14:09Z
day: '09'
ddc:
- '572'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: LeSa
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8353
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 2388d7e6e7a4d364c096fa89f305c3de
content_type: application/pdf
creator: jsteiner
date_created: 2020-09-09T14:22:35Z
date_updated: 2021-09-16T12:40:56Z
file_id: '8354'
file_name: Thesis_Julia_Steiner_pdfA.pdf
file_size: 117547589
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: ba112f957b7145462d0ab79044873ee9
content_type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
creator: jsteiner
date_created: 2020-09-09T14:23:25Z
date_updated: 2020-09-15T08:48:37Z
file_id: '8355'
file_name: Thesis_Julia_Steiner.docx
file_size: 223328668
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2021-09-16T12:40:56Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: None
page: '191'
project:
- _id: 26169496-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
grant_number: '24741'
name: Revealing the functional mechanism of Mrp antiporter, an ancestor of complex
I
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '8284'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Leonid A
full_name: Sazanov, Leonid A
id: 338D39FE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Sazanov
orcid: 0000-0002-0977-7989
title: Biochemical and structural investigation of the Mrp antiporter, an ancestor
of complex I
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8589'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: The plant hormone auxin plays indispensable roles in plant growth and development.
An essential level of regulation in auxin action is the directional auxin transport
within cells. The establishment of auxin gradient in plant tissue has been attributed
to local auxin biosynthesis and directional intercellular auxin transport, which
both are controlled by various environmental and developmental signals. It is
well established that asymmetric auxin distribution in cells is achieved by polarly
localized PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin efflux transporters. Despite the initial insights
into cellular mechanisms of PIN polarization obtained from the last decades, the
molecular mechanism and specific regulators mediating PIN polarization remains
elusive. In this thesis, we aim to find novel players in PIN subcellular polarity
regulation during Arabidopsis development. We first characterize the physiological
effect of piperonylic acid (PA) on Arabidopsis hypocotyl gravitropic bending and
PIN polarization. Secondly, we reveal the importance of SCFTIR1/AFB auxin signaling
pathway in shoot gravitropism bending termination. In addition, we also explore
the role of myosin XI complex, and actin cytoskeleton in auxin feedback regulation
on PIN polarity. In Chapter 1, we give an overview of the current knowledge about
PIN-mediated auxin fluxes in various plant tropic responses. In Chapter 2, we
study the physiological effect of PA on shoot gravitropic bending. Our results
show that PA treatment inhibits auxin-mediated PIN3 repolarization by interfering
with PINOID and PIN3 phosphorylation status, ultimately leading to hyperbending
hypocotyls. In Chapter 3, we provide evidence to show that the SCFTIR1/AFB nuclear
auxin signaling pathway is crucial and required for auxin-mediated PIN3 repolarization
and shoot gravitropic bending termination. In Chapter 4, we perform a phosphoproteomics
approach and identify the motor protein Myosin XI and its binding protein, the
MadB2 family, as an essential regulator of PIN polarity for auxin-canalization
related developmental processes. In Chapter 5, we demonstrate the vital role of
actin cytoskeleton in auxin feedback on PIN polarity by regulating PIN subcellular
trafficking. Overall, the data presented in this PhD thesis brings novel insights
into the PIN polar localization regulation that resulted in the (re)establishment
of the polar auxin flow and gradient in response to environmental stimuli during
plant development.
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: Bio
- _id: LifeSc
acknowledgement: I also want to thank the China Scholarship Council for supporting
my study during the year from 2015 to 2019. I also want to thank IST facilities
– the Bioimaging facility, the media kitchen, the plant facility and all of the
campus services, for their support.
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Huibin
full_name: Han, Huibin
id: 31435098-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Han
citation:
ama: Han H. Novel insights into PIN polarity regulation during Arabidopsis development.
2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8589
apa: Han, H. (2020). Novel insights into PIN polarity regulation during Arabidopsis
development. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8589
chicago: Han, Huibin. “Novel Insights into PIN Polarity Regulation during Arabidopsis
Development.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8589.
ieee: H. Han, “Novel insights into PIN polarity regulation during Arabidopsis development,”
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Han H. 2020. Novel insights into PIN polarity regulation during Arabidopsis
development. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Han, Huibin. Novel Insights into PIN Polarity Regulation during Arabidopsis
Development. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8589.
short: H. Han, Novel Insights into PIN Polarity Regulation during Arabidopsis Development,
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-09-30T14:50:51Z
date_published: 2020-09-30T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:13:05Z
day: '30'
ddc:
- '580'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: JiFr
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8589
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: c4bda1947d4c09c428ac9ce667b02327
content_type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-09-30T14:50:20Z
date_updated: 2020-09-30T14:50:20Z
file_id: '8590'
file_name: 2020_Han_Thesis.docx
file_size: 49198118
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 3f4f5d1718c2230adf30639ecaf8a00b
content_type: application/pdf
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-09-30T14:49:59Z
date_updated: 2021-10-01T13:33:02Z
file_id: '8591'
file_name: 2020_Han_Thesis.pdf
file_size: 15513963
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2021-10-01T13:33:02Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '164'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '7643'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Jiří
full_name: Friml, Jiří
id: 4159519E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Friml
orcid: 0000-0002-8302-7596
title: Novel insights into PIN polarity regulation during Arabidopsis development
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8155'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "In the thesis we focus on the interplay of the biophysics and evolution of
gene regulation. We start by addressing how the type of prokaryotic gene regulation
– activation and repression – affects spurious binding to DNA, also known as\r\ntranscriptional
crosstalk. We propose that regulatory interference caused by excess regulatory
proteins in the dense cellular medium – global crosstalk – could be a factor in
determining which type of gene regulatory network is evolutionarily preferred.
Next,we use a normative approach in eukaryotic gene regulation to describe minimal\r\nnon-equilibrium
enhancer models that optimize so-called regulatory phenotypes. We find a class
of models that differ from standard thermodynamic equilibrium models by a single
parameter that notably increases the regulatory performance. Next chapter addresses
the question of genotype-phenotype-fitness maps of higher dimensional phenotypes.
We show that our biophysically realistic approach allows us to understand how
the mechanisms of promoter function constrain genotypephenotype maps, and how
they affect the evolutionary trajectories of promoters.\r\nIn the last chapter
we ask whether the intrinsic instability of gene duplication and amplification
provides a generic alternative to canonical gene regulation. Using mathematical
modeling, we show that amplifications can tune gene expression in many environments,
including those where transcription factor-based schemes are\r\nhard to evolve
or maintain. "
acknowledgement: For the duration of his PhD, Rok was a recipient of a DOC fellowship
of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Rok
full_name: Grah, Rok
id: 483E70DE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Grah
orcid: 0000-0003-2539-3560
citation:
ama: Grah R. Gene regulation across scales – how biophysical constraints shape evolution.
2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8155
apa: Grah, R. (2020). Gene regulation across scales – how biophysical constraints
shape evolution. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8155
chicago: Grah, Rok. “Gene Regulation across Scales – How Biophysical Constraints
Shape Evolution.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8155.
ieee: R. Grah, “Gene regulation across scales – how biophysical constraints shape
evolution,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Grah R. 2020. Gene regulation across scales – how biophysical constraints
shape evolution. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Grah, Rok. Gene Regulation across Scales – How Biophysical Constraints Shape
Evolution. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8155.
short: R. Grah, Gene Regulation across Scales – How Biophysical Constraints Shape
Evolution, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-07-23T09:51:28Z
date_published: 2020-07-24T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:13:27Z
day: '24'
ddc:
- '530'
- '570'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: CaGu
- _id: GaTk
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8155
file:
- access_level: open_access
content_type: application/pdf
creator: rgrah
date_created: 2020-07-27T12:00:07Z
date_updated: 2020-07-27T12:00:07Z
file_id: '8176'
file_name: Thesis_RokGrah_200727_convertedNew.pdf
file_size: 16638998
relation: main_file
success: 1
- access_level: closed
content_type: application/zip
creator: rgrah
date_created: 2020-07-27T12:02:23Z
date_updated: 2020-07-30T13:04:55Z
file_id: '8177'
file_name: Thesis_new.zip
file_size: 347459978
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-30T13:04:55Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '07'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '310'
project:
- _id: 267C84F4-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
name: Biophysically realistic genotype-phenotype maps for regulatory networks
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '7675'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '7569'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '7652'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Calin C
full_name: Guet, Calin C
id: 47F8433E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Guet
orcid: 0000-0001-6220-2052
- first_name: Gašper
full_name: Tkačik, Gašper
id: 3D494DCA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Tkačik
orcid: 0000-0002-6699-1455
title: Gene regulation across scales – how biophysical constraints shape evolution
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '7460'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Many methods for the reconstruction of shapes from sets of points produce
ordered simplicial complexes, which are collections of vertices, edges, triangles,
and their higher-dimensional analogues, called simplices, in which every simplex
gets assigned a real value measuring its size. This thesis studies ordered simplicial
complexes, with a focus on their topology, which reflects the connectedness of
the represented shapes and the presence of holes. We are interested both in understanding
better the structure of these complexes, as well as in developing algorithms for
applications.\r\n\r\nFor the Delaunay triangulation, the most popular measure
for a simplex is the radius of the smallest empty circumsphere. Based on it, we
revisit Alpha and Wrap complexes and experimentally determine their probabilistic
properties for random data. Also, we prove the existence of tri-partitions, propose
algorithms to open and close holes, and extend the concepts from Euclidean to
Bregman geometries."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Katharina
full_name: Ölsböck, Katharina
id: 4D4AA390-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Ölsböck
orcid: 0000-0002-4672-8297
citation:
ama: Ölsböck K. The hole system of triangulated shapes. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7460
apa: Ölsböck, K. (2020). The hole system of triangulated shapes. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7460
chicago: Ölsböck, Katharina. “The Hole System of Triangulated Shapes.” Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7460.
ieee: K. Ölsböck, “The hole system of triangulated shapes,” Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Ölsböck K. 2020. The hole system of triangulated shapes. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria.
mla: Ölsböck, Katharina. The Hole System of Triangulated Shapes. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7460.
short: K. Ölsböck, The Hole System of Triangulated Shapes, Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-02-06T14:56:53Z
date_published: 2020-02-10T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:15:30Z
day: '10'
ddc:
- '514'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: HeEd
- _id: GradSch
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:7460
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 1df9f8c530b443c0e63a3f2e4fde412e
content_type: application/pdf
creator: koelsboe
date_created: 2020-02-06T14:43:54Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:47:58Z
file_id: '7461'
file_name: thesis_ist-final_noack.pdf
file_size: 76195184
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: 7a52383c812b0be64d3826546509e5a4
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: koelsboe
date_created: 2020-02-06T14:52:45Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:47:58Z
description: latex source files, figures
file_id: '7462'
file_name: latex-files.zip
file_size: 122103715
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:47:58Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
keyword:
- shape reconstruction
- hole manipulation
- ordered complexes
- Alpha complex
- Wrap complex
- computational topology
- Bregman geometry
language:
- iso: eng
month: '02'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '155'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '6608'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Herbert
full_name: Edelsbrunner, Herbert
id: 3FB178DA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Edelsbrunner
orcid: 0000-0002-9823-6833
title: The hole system of triangulated shapes
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by_nc_sa.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC
BY-NC-SA 4.0)
short: CC BY-NC-SA (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '7896'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "A search problem lies in the complexity class FNP if a solution to the given
instance of the problem can be verified efficiently. The complexity class TFNP
consists of all search problems in FNP that are total in the sense that a solution
is guaranteed to exist. TFNP contains a host of interesting problems from fields
such as algorithmic game theory, computational topology, number theory and combinatorics.
Since TFNP is a semantic class, it is unlikely to have a complete problem. Instead,
one studies its syntactic subclasses which are defined based on the combinatorial
principle used to argue totality. Of particular interest is the subclass PPAD,
which contains important problems\r\nlike computing Nash equilibrium for bimatrix
games and computational counterparts of several fixed-point theorems as complete.
In the thesis, we undertake the study of averagecase hardness of TFNP, and in
particular its subclass PPAD.\r\nAlmost nothing was known about average-case hardness
of PPAD before a series of recent results showed how to achieve it using a cryptographic
primitive called program obfuscation.\r\nHowever, it is currently not known how
to construct program obfuscation from standard cryptographic assumptions. Therefore,
it is desirable to relax the assumption under which average-case hardness of PPAD
can be shown. In the thesis we take a step in this direction. First, we show that
assuming the (average-case) hardness of a numbertheoretic\r\nproblem related to
factoring of integers, which we call Iterated-Squaring, PPAD is hard-on-average
in the random-oracle model. Then we strengthen this result to show that the average-case
hardness of PPAD reduces to the (adaptive) soundness of the Fiat-Shamir Transform,
a well-known technique used to compile a public-coin interactive protocol into
a non-interactive one. As a corollary, we obtain average-case hardness for PPAD
in the random-oracle model assuming the worst-case hardness of #SAT. Moreover,
the above results can all be strengthened to obtain average-case hardness for
the class CLS ⊆ PPAD.\r\nOur main technical contribution is constructing incrementally-verifiable
procedures for computing Iterated-Squaring and #SAT. By incrementally-verifiable,
we mean that every intermediate state of the computation includes a proof of its
correctness, and the proof can be updated and verified in polynomial time. Previous
constructions of such procedures relied on strong, non-standard assumptions. Instead,
we introduce a technique called recursive proof-merging to obtain the same from
weaker assumptions. "
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Chethan
full_name: Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan
id: 4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Kamath Hosdurg
citation:
ama: Kamath Hosdurg C. On the average-case hardness of total search problems. 2020.
doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896
apa: Kamath Hosdurg, C. (2020). On the average-case hardness of total search
problems. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896
chicago: Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan. “On the Average-Case Hardness of Total Search
Problems.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896.
ieee: C. Kamath Hosdurg, “On the average-case hardness of total search problems,”
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Kamath Hosdurg C. 2020. On the average-case hardness of total search problems.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan. On the Average-Case Hardness of Total Search Problems.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896.
short: C. Kamath Hosdurg, On the Average-Case Hardness of Total Search Problems,
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-05-26T14:08:55Z
date_published: 2020-05-25T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:15:55Z
day: '25'
ddc:
- '000'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: KrPi
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: b39e2e1c376f5819b823fb7077491c64
content_type: application/pdf
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-05-26T14:08:13Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:04Z
file_id: '7897'
file_name: 2020_Thesis_Kamath.pdf
file_size: 1622742
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: 8b26ba729c1a85ac6bea775f5d73cdc7
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-05-26T14:08:23Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:04Z
file_id: '7898'
file_name: Thesis_Kamath.zip
file_size: 15301529
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:04Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '05'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '126'
project:
- _id: 258C570E-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: FP7
grant_number: '259668'
name: Provable Security for Physical Cryptography
- _id: 258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '682815'
name: Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '6677'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Krzysztof Z
full_name: Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z
id: 3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Pietrzak
orcid: 0000-0002-9139-1654
title: On the average-case hardness of total search problems
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)
short: CC BY (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '7944'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "This thesis considers two examples of reconfiguration problems: flipping
edges in edge-labelled triangulations of planar point sets and swapping labelled
tokens placed on vertices of a graph. In both cases the studied structures – all
the triangulations of a given point set or all token placements on a given graph
– can be thought of as vertices of the so-called reconfiguration graph, in which
two vertices are adjacent if the corresponding structures differ by a single elementary
operation – by a flip of a diagonal in a triangulation or by a swap of tokens
on adjacent vertices, respectively. We study the reconfiguration of one instance
of a structure into another via (shortest) paths in the reconfiguration graph.\r\n\r\nFor
triangulations of point sets in which each edge has a unique label and a flip
transfers the label from the removed edge to the new edge, we prove a polynomial-time
testable condition, called the Orbit Theorem, that characterizes when two triangulations
of the same point set lie in the same connected component of the reconfiguration
graph. The condition was first conjectured by Bose, Lubiw, Pathak and Verdonschot.
We additionally provide a polynomial time algorithm that computes a reconfiguring
flip sequence, if it exists. Our proof of the Orbit Theorem uses topological properties
of a certain high-dimensional cell complex that has the usual reconfiguration
graph as its 1-skeleton.\r\n\r\nIn the context of token swapping on a tree graph,
we make partial progress on the problem of finding shortest reconfiguration sequences.
We disprove the so-called Happy Leaf Conjecture and demonstrate the importance
of swapping tokens that are already placed at the correct vertices. We also prove
that a generalization of the problem to weighted coloured token swapping is NP-hard
on trees but solvable in polynomial time on paths and stars."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Zuzana
full_name: Masárová, Zuzana
id: 45CFE238-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Masárová
orcid: 0000-0002-6660-1322
citation:
ama: Masárová Z. Reconfiguration problems. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7944
apa: Masárová, Z. (2020). Reconfiguration problems. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7944
chicago: Masárová, Zuzana. “Reconfiguration Problems.” Institute of Science and
Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7944.
ieee: Z. Masárová, “Reconfiguration problems,” Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2020.
ista: Masárová Z. 2020. Reconfiguration problems. Institute of Science and Technology
Austria.
mla: Masárová, Zuzana. Reconfiguration Problems. Institute of Science and
Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7944.
short: Z. Masárová, Reconfiguration Problems, Institute of Science and Technology
Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-06-08T00:49:46Z
date_published: 2020-06-09T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:17:37Z
day: '09'
ddc:
- '516'
- '514'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: HeEd
- _id: UlWa
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:7944
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: df688bc5a82b50baee0b99d25fc7b7f0
content_type: application/pdf
creator: zmasarov
date_created: 2020-06-08T00:34:00Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:05Z
file_id: '7945'
file_name: THESIS_Zuzka_Masarova.pdf
file_size: 13661779
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: 45341a35b8f5529c74010b7af43ac188
content_type: application/zip
creator: zmasarov
date_created: 2020-06-08T00:35:30Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:05Z
file_id: '7946'
file_name: THESIS_Zuzka_Masarova_SOURCE_FILES.zip
file_size: 32184006
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:05Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
keyword:
- reconfiguration
- reconfiguration graph
- triangulations
- flip
- constrained triangulations
- shellability
- piecewise-linear balls
- token swapping
- trees
- coloured weighted token swapping
language:
- iso: eng
month: '06'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '160'
publication_identifier:
isbn:
- 978-3-99078-005-3
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '7950'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '5986'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Uli
full_name: Wagner, Uli
id: 36690CA2-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Wagner
orcid: 0000-0002-1494-0568
- first_name: Herbert
full_name: Edelsbrunner, Herbert
id: 3FB178DA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Edelsbrunner
orcid: 0000-0002-9823-6833
title: Reconfiguration problems
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by_sa.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License (CC
BY-SA 4.0)
short: CC BY-SA (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8341'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "One of the most striking hallmarks of the eukaryotic cell is the presence
of intracellular vesicles and organelles. Each of these membrane-enclosed compartments
has a distinct composition of lipids and proteins, which is essential for accurate
membrane traffic and homeostasis. Interestingly, their biochemical identities
are achieved with the help\r\nof small GTPases of the Rab family, which cycle
between GDP- and GTP-bound forms on the selected membrane surface. While this
activity switch is well understood for an individual protein, how Rab GTPases
collectively transition between states to generate decisive signal propagation
in space and time is unclear. In my PhD thesis, I present\r\nin vitro reconstitution
experiments with theoretical modeling to systematically study a minimal Rab5 activation
network from bottom-up. We find that positive feedback based on known molecular
interactions gives rise to bistable GTPase activity switching on system’s scale.
Furthermore, we determine that collective transition near the critical\r\npoint
is intrinsically stochastic and provide evidence that the inactive Rab5 abundance
on the membrane can shape the network response. Finally, we demonstrate that collective
switching can spread on the lipid bilayer as a traveling activation wave, representing
a possible emergent activity pattern in endosomal maturation. Together, our\r\nfindings
reveal new insights into the self-organization properties of signaling networks
away from chemical equilibrium. Our work highlights the importance of systematic
characterization of biochemical systems in well-defined physiological conditions.
This way, we were able to answer long-standing open questions in the field and
close the gap between regulatory processes on a molecular scale and emergent responses
on system’s level."
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: Bio
- _id: LifeSc
- _id: NanoFab
acknowledgement: My thanks goes to the Loose lab members, BioImaging, Life Science
and Nanofabrication Facilities and the wonderful international community at IST
for sharing this experience with me.
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Urban
full_name: Bezeljak, Urban
id: 2A58201A-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Bezeljak
orcid: 0000-0003-1365-5631
citation:
ama: Bezeljak U. In vitro reconstitution of a Rab activation switch. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8341
apa: Bezeljak, U. (2020). In vitro reconstitution of a Rab activation switch.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8341
chicago: Bezeljak, Urban. “In Vitro Reconstitution of a Rab Activation Switch.”
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8341.
ieee: U. Bezeljak, “In vitro reconstitution of a Rab activation switch,” Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Bezeljak U. 2020. In vitro reconstitution of a Rab activation switch. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Bezeljak, Urban. In Vitro Reconstitution of a Rab Activation Switch.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8341.
short: U. Bezeljak, In Vitro Reconstitution of a Rab Activation Switch, Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-09-08T08:53:53Z
date_published: 2020-09-08T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:17:06Z
day: '08'
ddc:
- '570'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: MaLo
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8341
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: 70871b335a595252a66c6bbf0824fb02
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-09-08T09:00:29Z
date_updated: 2021-09-16T12:49:12Z
file_id: '8342'
file_name: 2020_Urban_Bezeljak_Thesis_TeX.zip
file_size: 65246782
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 59a62275088b00b7241e6ff4136434c7
content_type: application/pdf
creator: dernst
date_created: 2020-09-08T09:00:27Z
date_updated: 2021-09-16T12:49:12Z
file_id: '8343'
file_name: 2020_Urban_Bezeljak_Thesis.pdf
file_size: 31259058
relation: main_file
file_date_updated: 2021-09-16T12:49:12Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '215'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '7580'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Martin
full_name: Loose, Martin
id: 462D4284-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Loose
orcid: 0000-0001-7309-9724
title: In vitro reconstitution of a Rab activation switch
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by_nc_sa.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC
BY-NC-SA 4.0)
short: CC BY-NC-SA (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8032'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Algorithms in computational 3-manifold topology typically take a triangulation
as an input and return topological information about the underlying 3-manifold.
However, extracting the desired information from a triangulation (e.g., evaluating
an invariant) is often computationally very expensive. In recent years this complexity
barrier has been successfully tackled in some cases by importing ideas from the
theory of parameterized algorithms into the realm of 3-manifolds. Various computationally
hard problems were shown to be efficiently solvable for input triangulations that
are sufficiently “tree-like.”\r\nIn this thesis we focus on the key combinatorial
parameter in the above context: we consider the treewidth of a compact, orientable
3-manifold, i.e., the smallest treewidth of the dual graph of any triangulation
thereof. By building on the work of Scharlemann–Thompson and Scharlemann–Schultens–Saito
on generalized Heegaard splittings, and on the work of Jaco–Rubinstein on layered
triangulations, we establish quantitative relations between the treewidth and
classical topological invariants of a 3-manifold. In particular, among other results,
we show that the treewidth of a closed, orientable, irreducible, non-Haken 3-manifold
is always within a constant factor of its Heegaard genus."
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: E-Lib
- _id: CampIT
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Kristóf
full_name: Huszár, Kristóf
id: 33C26278-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Huszár
orcid: 0000-0002-5445-5057
citation:
ama: Huszár K. Combinatorial width parameters for 3-dimensional manifolds. 2020.
doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8032
apa: Huszár, K. (2020). Combinatorial width parameters for 3-dimensional manifolds.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8032
chicago: Huszár, Kristóf. “Combinatorial Width Parameters for 3-Dimensional Manifolds.”
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8032.
ieee: K. Huszár, “Combinatorial width parameters for 3-dimensional manifolds,” Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Huszár K. 2020. Combinatorial width parameters for 3-dimensional manifolds.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Huszár, Kristóf. Combinatorial Width Parameters for 3-Dimensional Manifolds.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8032.
short: K. Huszár, Combinatorial Width Parameters for 3-Dimensional Manifolds, Institute
of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-06-26T10:00:36Z
date_published: 2020-06-26T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:18:27Z
day: '26'
ddc:
- '514'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: UlWa
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8032
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: bd8be6e4f1addc863dfcc0fad29ee9c3
content_type: application/pdf
creator: khuszar
date_created: 2020-06-26T10:03:58Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:08Z
file_id: '8034'
file_name: Kristof_Huszar-Thesis.pdf
file_size: 2637562
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: d5f8456202b32f4a77552ef47a2837d1
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: khuszar
date_created: 2020-06-26T10:10:06Z
date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:08Z
file_id: '8035'
file_name: Kristof_Huszar-Thesis-source.zip
file_size: 7163491
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-07-14T12:48:08Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '06'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: xviii+120
publication_identifier:
isbn:
- 978-3-99078-006-0
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '6556'
relation: dissertation_contains
status: public
- id: '7093'
relation: dissertation_contains
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Uli
full_name: Wagner, Uli
id: 36690CA2-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Wagner
orcid: 0000-0002-1494-0568
- first_name: Jonathan
full_name: Spreer, Jonathan
last_name: Spreer
title: Combinatorial width parameters for 3-dimensional manifolds
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)
short: CC BY (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8358'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "During bacterial cell division, the tubulin-homolog FtsZ forms a ring-like
structure at the center of the cell. This so-called Z-ring acts as a scaffold
recruiting several division-related proteins to mid-cell and plays a key role
in distributing proteins at the division site, a feature driven by the treadmilling
motion of FtsZ filaments around the septum. What regulates the architecture, dynamics
and stability of the Z-ring is still poorly understood, but FtsZ-associated proteins
(Zaps) are known to play an important role. \r\nAdvances in fluorescence microscopy
and in vitro reconstitution experiments have helped to shed light into some of
the dynamic properties of these complex systems, but methods that allow to collect
and analyze large quantitative data sets of the underlying polymer dynamics are
still missing.\r\nHere, using an in vitro reconstitution approach, we studied
how different Zaps affect FtsZ filament dynamics and organization into large-scale
patterns, giving special emphasis to the role of the well-conserved protein ZapA.
For this purpose, we use high-resolution fluorescence microscopy combined with
novel image analysis workfows to study pattern organization and polymerization
dynamics of active filaments. We quantified the influence of Zaps on FtsZ on three
diferent spatial scales: the large-scale organization of the membrane-bound filament
network, the underlying\r\npolymerization dynamics and the behavior of single
molecules.\r\nWe found that ZapA cooperatively increases the spatial order of
the filament network, binds only transiently to FtsZ filaments and has no effect
on filament length and treadmilling velocity. Our data provides a model for how
FtsZ-associated proteins can increase the precision and stability of the bacterial
cell division machinery in a\r\nswitch-like manner, without compromising filament
dynamics. Furthermore, we believe that our automated quantitative methods can
be used to analyze a large variety of dynamic cytoskeletal systems, using standard
time-lapse\r\nmovies of homogeneously labeled proteins obtained from experiments
in vitro or even inside the living cell.\r\n"
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: Bio
acknowledgement: I should also express my gratitude to the bioimaging facility at
IST Austria, for their assistance with the TIRF setup over the years, and especially
to Christoph Sommer, who gave me a lot of input when I was starting to dive into
programming.
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Paulo R
full_name: Dos Santos Caldas, Paulo R
id: 38FCDB4C-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Dos Santos Caldas
orcid: 0000-0001-6730-4461
citation:
ama: Dos Santos Caldas PR. Organization and dynamics of treadmilling filaments in
cytoskeletal networks of FtsZ and its crosslinkers. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8358
apa: Dos Santos Caldas, P. R. (2020). Organization and dynamics of treadmilling
filaments in cytoskeletal networks of FtsZ and its crosslinkers. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8358
chicago: Dos Santos Caldas, Paulo R. “Organization and Dynamics of Treadmilling
Filaments in Cytoskeletal Networks of FtsZ and Its Crosslinkers.” Institute of
Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8358.
ieee: P. R. Dos Santos Caldas, “Organization and dynamics of treadmilling filaments
in cytoskeletal networks of FtsZ and its crosslinkers,” Institute of Science and
Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Dos Santos Caldas PR. 2020. Organization and dynamics of treadmilling filaments
in cytoskeletal networks of FtsZ and its crosslinkers. Institute of Science and
Technology Austria.
mla: Dos Santos Caldas, Paulo R. Organization and Dynamics of Treadmilling Filaments
in Cytoskeletal Networks of FtsZ and Its Crosslinkers. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8358.
short: P.R. Dos Santos Caldas, Organization and Dynamics of Treadmilling Filaments
in Cytoskeletal Networks of FtsZ and Its Crosslinkers, Institute of Science and
Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-09-10T09:26:49Z
date_published: 2020-09-10T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-07T13:18:51Z
day: '10'
ddc:
- '572'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: MaLo
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8358
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 882f93fe9c351962120e2669b84bf088
content_type: application/pdf
creator: pcaldas
date_created: 2020-09-10T12:11:29Z
date_updated: 2020-09-10T12:11:29Z
file_id: '8364'
file_name: phd_thesis_pcaldas.pdf
file_size: 141602462
relation: main_file
success: 1
- access_level: closed
checksum: 70cc9e399c4e41e6e6ac445ae55e8558
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: pcaldas
date_created: 2020-09-10T12:18:17Z
date_updated: 2020-09-11T07:48:10Z
file_id: '8365'
file_name: phd_thesis_latex_pcaldas.zip
file_size: 450437458
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-09-11T07:48:10Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '135'
publication_identifier:
isbn:
- 978-3-99078-009-1
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '7572'
relation: dissertation_contains
status: public
- id: '7197'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Martin
full_name: Loose, Martin
id: 462D4284-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Loose
orcid: 0000-0001-7309-9724
title: Organization and dynamics of treadmilling filaments in cytoskeletal networks
of FtsZ and its crosslinkers
tmp:
image: /images/cc_by.png
legal_code_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
name: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)
short: CC BY (4.0)
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8332'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Designing and verifying concurrent programs is a notoriously challenging,
time consuming, and error prone task, even for experts. This is due to the sheer
number of possible interleavings of a concurrent program, all of which have to
be tracked and accounted for in a formal proof. Inventing an inductive invariant
that captures all interleavings of a low-level implementation is theoretically
possible, but practically intractable. We develop a refinement-based verification
framework that provides mechanisms to simplify proof construction by decomposing
the verification task into smaller subtasks.\r\n\r\nIn a first line of work, we
present a foundation for refinement reasoning over structured concurrent programs.
We introduce layered concurrent programs as a compact notation to represent multi-layer
refinement proofs. A layered concurrent program specifies a sequence of connected
concurrent programs, from most concrete to most abstract, such that common parts
of different programs are written exactly once. Each program in this sequence
is expressed as structured concurrent program, i.e., a program over (potentially
recursive) procedures, imperative control flow, gated atomic actions, structured
parallelism, and asynchronous concurrency. This is in contrast to existing refinement-based
verifiers, which represent concurrent systems as flat transition relations. We
present a powerful refinement proof rule that decomposes refinement checking over
structured programs into modular verification conditions. Refinement checking
is supported by a new form of modular, parameterized invariants, called yield
invariants, and a linear permission system to enhance local reasoning.\r\n\r\nIn
a second line of work, we present two new reduction-based program transformations
that target asynchronous programs. These transformations reduce the number of
interleavings that need to be considered, thus reducing the complexity of invariants.
Synchronization simplifies the verification of asynchronous programs by introducing
the fiction, for proof purposes, that asynchronous operations complete synchronously.
Synchronization summarizes an asynchronous computation as immediate atomic effect.
Inductive sequentialization establishes sequential reductions that captures every
behavior of the original program up to reordering of coarse-grained commutative
actions. A sequential reduction of a concurrent program is easy to reason about
since it corresponds to a simple execution of the program in an idealized synchronous
environment, where processes act in a fixed order and at the same speed.\r\n\r\nOur
approach is implemented the CIVL verifier, which has been successfully used for
the verification of several complex concurrent programs. In our methodology, the
overall correctness of a program is established piecemeal by focusing on the invariant
required for each refinement step separately. While the programmer does the creative
work of specifying the chain of programs and the inductive invariant justifying
each link in the chain, the tool automatically constructs the verification conditions
underlying each refinement step."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Bernhard
full_name: Kragl, Bernhard
id: 320FC952-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Kragl
orcid: 0000-0001-7745-9117
citation:
ama: 'Kragl B. Verifying concurrent programs: Refinement, synchronization, sequentialization.
2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8332'
apa: 'Kragl, B. (2020). Verifying concurrent programs: Refinement, synchronization,
sequentialization. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8332'
chicago: 'Kragl, Bernhard. “Verifying Concurrent Programs: Refinement, Synchronization,
Sequentialization.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8332.'
ieee: 'B. Kragl, “Verifying concurrent programs: Refinement, synchronization, sequentialization,”
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.'
ista: 'Kragl B. 2020. Verifying concurrent programs: Refinement, synchronization,
sequentialization. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.'
mla: 'Kragl, Bernhard. Verifying Concurrent Programs: Refinement, Synchronization,
Sequentialization. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8332.'
short: 'B. Kragl, Verifying Concurrent Programs: Refinement, Synchronization, Sequentialization,
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.'
date_created: 2020-09-04T12:24:12Z
date_published: 2020-09-03T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-13T08:45:08Z
day: '03'
ddc:
- '000'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: ToHe
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8332
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 26fe261550f691280bda4c454bf015c7
content_type: application/pdf
creator: bkragl
date_created: 2020-09-04T12:17:47Z
date_updated: 2020-09-04T12:17:47Z
file_id: '8333'
file_name: kragl-thesis.pdf
file_size: 1348815
relation: main_file
- access_level: closed
checksum: b9694ce092b7c55557122adba8337ebc
content_type: application/zip
creator: bkragl
date_created: 2020-09-04T13:00:17Z
date_updated: 2020-09-04T13:00:17Z
file_id: '8335'
file_name: kragl-thesis.zip
file_size: 372312
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-09-04T13:00:17Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '120'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '133'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '8012'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '8195'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '160'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Thomas A
full_name: Henzinger, Thomas A
id: 40876CD8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Henzinger
orcid: 0000-0002-2985-7724
title: 'Verifying concurrent programs: Refinement, synchronization, sequentialization'
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8958'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "The oft-quoted dictum by Arthur Schawlow: ``A diatomic molecule has one atom
too many'' has been disavowed. Inspired by the possibility to experimentally manipulate
and enhance chemical reactivity in helium nanodroplets, we investigate the rotation
of coupled cold molecules in the presence of a many-body environment.\r\nIn this
thesis, we introduce new variational approaches to quantum impurities and apply
them to the Fröhlich polaron - a quasiparticle formed out of an electron (or other
point-like impurity) in a polar medium, and to the angulon - a quasiparticle formed
out of a rotating molecule in a bosonic bath.\r\nWith this theoretical toolbox,
we reveal the self-localization transition for the angulon quasiparticle. We show
that, unlike for polarons, self-localization of angulons occurs at finite impurity-bath
coupling already at the mean-field level. The transition is accompanied by the
spherical-symmetry breaking of the angulon ground state and a discontinuity in
the first derivative of the ground-state energy. Moreover, the type of symmetry
breaking is dictated by the symmetry of the microscopic impurity-bath interaction,
which leads to a number of distinct self-localized states. \r\nFor the system
containing multiple impurities, by analogy with the bipolaron, we introduce the
biangulon quasiparticle describing two rotating molecules that align with respect
to each other due to the effective attractive interaction mediated by the excitations
of the bath. We study this system from the strong-coupling regime to the weak
molecule-bath interaction regime. We show that the molecules tend to have a strong
alignment in the ground state, the biangulon shows shifted angulon instabilities
and an additional spectral instability, where resonant angular momentum transfer
between the molecules and the bath takes place. Finally, we introduce a diagonalization
scheme that allows us to describe the transition from two separated angulons to
a biangulon as a function of the distance between the two molecules."
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Xiang
full_name: Li, Xiang
id: 4B7E523C-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Li
citation:
ama: Li X. Rotation of coupled cold molecules in the presence of a many-body environment.
2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8958
apa: Li, X. (2020). Rotation of coupled cold molecules in the presence of a many-body
environment. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8958
chicago: Li, Xiang. “Rotation of Coupled Cold Molecules in the Presence of a Many-Body
Environment.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8958.
ieee: X. Li, “Rotation of coupled cold molecules in the presence of a many-body
environment,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Li X. 2020. Rotation of coupled cold molecules in the presence of a many-body
environment. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
mla: Li, Xiang. Rotation of Coupled Cold Molecules in the Presence of a Many-Body
Environment. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8958.
short: X. Li, Rotation of Coupled Cold Molecules in the Presence of a Many-Body
Environment, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-12-21T09:44:30Z
date_published: 2020-12-21T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-20T11:30:58Z
day: '21'
ddc:
- '539'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: MiLe
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8958
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 3994c54a1241451d561db1d4f43bad30
content_type: application/pdf
creator: xli
date_created: 2020-12-22T10:55:56Z
date_updated: 2020-12-22T10:55:56Z
file_id: '8967'
file_name: THESIS_Xiang_Li.pdf
file_size: 3622305
relation: main_file
success: 1
- access_level: closed
checksum: 0954ecfc5554c05615c14de803341f00
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: xli
date_created: 2020-12-22T10:56:03Z
date_updated: 2020-12-30T07:18:03Z
file_id: '8968'
file_name: THESIS_Xiang_Li.zip
file_size: 4018859
relation: source_file
file_date_updated: 2020-12-30T07:18:03Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '12'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '125'
project:
- _id: 26031614-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: FWF
grant_number: P29902
name: Quantum rotations in the presence of a many-body environment
- _id: 2688CF98-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '801770'
name: 'Angulon: physics and applications of a new quasiparticle'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '5886'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '8587'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '1120'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Mikhail
full_name: Lemeshko, Mikhail
id: 37CB05FA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Lemeshko
orcid: 0000-0002-6990-7802
title: Rotation of coupled cold molecules in the presence of a many-body environment
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...
---
_id: '8386'
abstract:
- lang: eng
text: "Form versus function is a long-standing debate in various design-related
fields, such as architecture as well as graphic and industrial design. A good
design that balances form and function often requires considerable human effort
and collaboration among experts from different professional fields. Computational
design tools provide a new paradigm for designing functional objects. In computational
design, form and function are represented as mathematical\r\nquantities, with
the help of numerical and combinatorial algorithms, they can assist even novice
users in designing versatile models that exhibit their desired functionality.
This thesis presents three disparate research studies on the computational design
of functional objects: The appearance of 3d print—we optimize the volumetric material
distribution for faithfully replicating colored surface texture in 3d printing;
the dynamic motion of mechanical structures—\r\nour design system helps the novice
user to retarget various mechanical templates with different functionality to
complex 3d shapes; and a more abstract functionality, multistability—our algorithm
automatically generates models that exhibit multiple stable target poses. For
each of these cases, our computational design tools not only ensure the functionality
of the results but also permit the user aesthetic freedom over the form. Moreover,
fabrication constraints\r\nwere taken into account, which allow for the immediate
creation of physical realization via 3D printing or laser cutting."
acknowledged_ssus:
- _id: SSU
acknowledgement: The research in this thesis has received funding from the European
Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie
grant agreement No 642841 (DISTRO) and the European Research Council grant agreement
No 715767 (MATERIALIZABLE). All the research projects in this thesis were also supported
by Scientific Service Units (SSUs) at IST Austria.
alternative_title:
- ISTA Thesis
article_processing_charge: No
author:
- first_name: Ran
full_name: Zhang, Ran
id: 4DDBCEB0-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Zhang
orcid: 0000-0002-3808-281X
citation:
ama: Zhang R. Structure-aware computational design and its application to 3D printable
volume scattering, mechanism, and multistability. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8386
apa: Zhang, R. (2020). Structure-aware computational design and its application
to 3D printable volume scattering, mechanism, and multistability. Institute
of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8386
chicago: Zhang, Ran. “Structure-Aware Computational Design and Its Application to
3D Printable Volume Scattering, Mechanism, and Multistability.” Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:8386.
ieee: R. Zhang, “Structure-aware computational design and its application to 3D
printable volume scattering, mechanism, and multistability,” Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020.
ista: Zhang R. 2020. Structure-aware computational design and its application to
3D printable volume scattering, mechanism, and multistability. Institute of Science
and Technology Austria.
mla: Zhang, Ran. Structure-Aware Computational Design and Its Application to
3D Printable Volume Scattering, Mechanism, and Multistability. Institute of
Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:8386.
short: R. Zhang, Structure-Aware Computational Design and Its Application to 3D
Printable Volume Scattering, Mechanism, and Multistability, Institute of Science
and Technology Austria, 2020.
date_created: 2020-09-14T01:04:53Z
date_published: 2020-09-14T00:00:00Z
date_updated: 2023-09-22T09:49:31Z
day: '14'
ddc:
- '003'
degree_awarded: PhD
department:
- _id: BeBi
doi: 10.15479/AT:ISTA:8386
ec_funded: 1
file:
- access_level: closed
checksum: edcf578b6e1c9b0dd81ff72d319b66ba
content_type: application/x-zip-compressed
creator: rzhang
date_created: 2020-09-14T01:02:59Z
date_updated: 2020-09-14T12:18:43Z
file_id: '8388'
file_name: Thesis_Ran.zip
file_size: 1245800191
relation: source_file
- access_level: open_access
checksum: 817e20c33be9247f906925517c56a40d
content_type: application/pdf
creator: rzhang
date_created: 2020-09-15T12:51:53Z
date_updated: 2020-09-15T12:51:53Z
file_id: '8396'
file_name: PhD_thesis_Ran Zhang_20200915.pdf
file_size: 161385316
relation: main_file
success: 1
file_date_updated: 2020-09-15T12:51:53Z
has_accepted_license: '1'
language:
- iso: eng
month: '09'
oa: 1
oa_version: Published Version
page: '148'
project:
- _id: 2508E324-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '642841'
name: Distributed 3D Object Design
- _id: 24F9549A-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425
call_identifier: H2020
grant_number: '715767'
name: 'MATERIALIZABLE: Intelligent fabrication-oriented Computational Design and
Modeling'
publication_identifier:
issn:
- 2663-337X
publication_status: published
publisher: Institute of Science and Technology Austria
related_material:
record:
- id: '486'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
- id: '1002'
relation: part_of_dissertation
status: public
status: public
supervisor:
- first_name: Bernd
full_name: Bickel, Bernd
id: 49876194-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87
last_name: Bickel
orcid: 0000-0001-6511-9385
title: Structure-aware computational design and its application to 3D printable volume
scattering, mechanism, and multistability
type: dissertation
user_id: c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1
year: '2020'
...