TY - CONF AU - Bollenbach, Mark Tobias AU - Strother, T. AU - Bauer, Wolfgang ID - 3425 TI - 3D supernova collapse calculations VL - 166 ER - TY - CHAP AU - Peter Jonas AU - Unsicker, Klaus ED - Schmidt, R. F. ID - 3458 T2 - Lehrbuch Vorklinik TI - Molekulare und zelluläre Grundlagen des Nervensystems. VL - B ER - TY - JOUR AB - Genetic engineering of the mouse brain allows investigators to address novel hypotheses in vivo. Because of the paucity of information on the network patterns of the mouse hippocampus, we investigated the electrical patterns in the behaving animal using multisite silicon probes and wire tetrodes. Theta (6-9 Hz) and gamma (40-100 Hz) oscillations were present during exploration and rapid eye movement sleep. Gamma power and theta power were comodulated and gamma power varied as a function of the theta cycle. Pyramidal cells and putative interneurons were phase-locked to theta oscillations. During immobility, consummatory behaviors and slow-wave sleep, sharp waves were present in cornu ammonis region CA1 of the hippocampus stratum radiatum associated with 140-200-Hz “ripples” in the pyramidal cell layer and population burst of CA1 neurons. In the hilus, large-amplitude “dentate spikes” occurred in association with increased discharge of hilar neurons. The amplitude of field patterns was larger in the mouse than in the rat, likely reflecting the higher neuron density in a smaller brain. We suggest that the main hippocampal network patterns are mediated by similar pathways and mechanisms in mouse and rat. AU - Buzsáki, György AU - Buhl, Derek L AU - Harris, Kenneth D AU - Jozsef Csicsvari AU - Czéh, Boldizsár AU - Morozov, Alexei ID - 3536 IS - 1 JF - Neuroscience TI - Hippocampal network patterns of activity in the mouse VL - 116 ER - TY - CONF AB - We define the Morse-Smale complex of a Morse function over a 3-manifold as the overlay of the descending and as- cending manifolds of all critical points. In the generic case, its 3-dimensional cells are shaped like crystals and are sepa- rated by quadrangular faces. In this paper, we give a combi- natorial algorithm for constructing such complexes for piece- wise linear data. AU - Herbert Edelsbrunner AU - Harer, John AU - Natarajan, Vijay AU - Pascucci, Valerio ID - 3556 TI - Morse-Smale complexes for piecewise linear 3-manifolds ER - TY - CHAP AB - Given a finite point set in R, the surface reconstruction problem asks for a surface that passes through many but not necessarily all points. We describe an unambigu- ous definition of such a surface in geometric and topological terms, and sketch a fast algorithm for constructing it. Our solution overcomes past limitations to special point distributions and heuristic design decisions. AU - Herbert Edelsbrunner ID - 3573 T2 - Discrete & Computational Geometry TI - Surface reconstruction by wrapping finite sets in space ER - TY - JOUR AB - We develop fast algorithms for computing the linking number of a simplicial complex within a filtration.We give experimental results in applying our work toward the detection of non-trivial tangling in biomolecules, modeled as alpha complexes. AU - Edelsbrunner, Herbert AU - Zomorodian, Afra ID - 3584 IS - 2 JF - Homology, Homotopy and Applications TI - Computing linking numbers of a filtration VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Stable hybrid zones in which ecologically divergent taxa give rise to a range of recombinants are natural laboratories in which the genetic basis of adaptation and reproductive isolation can be unraveled. One such hybrid zone is formed by the fire-bellied toads Bombina bombina and B. variegata (Anura: Discoglossidae). Adaptations to permanent and ephemeral breeding habitats, respectively, have shaped numerous phenotypic differences between the taxa. All of these are, in principle, candidates for a genetic dissection via QTL mapping. We present here a linkage map of 28 codominant and 10 dominant markers in the Bombina genome. In an F2 cross, markers that were mainly microsatellites, SSCPs or allozymes were mapped to 20 linkage groups. Among the 40 isolated CA microsatellites, we noted a preponderance of compound and frequently interleaved CA-TA repeats as well as a striking polarity at the 5′ end of the repeats. AU - Nürnberger, Beate AU - Hofman, Sebastian AU - Förg-Brey, Bqruni AU - Praetzel, Gabriele AU - Maclean, Alan W AU - Szymura, Jacek M AU - Abbott, Catherine M AU - Nicholas Barton ID - 3620 IS - 2 JF - Heredity TI - A linkage map for the hybridising toads Bombina bombina and B. variegata (Anura: Discoglossidae) VL - 91 ER - TY - JOUR AB - What is the chance that some part of a stretch of genome will survive? In a population of constant size, and with no selection, the probability of survival of some part of a stretch of map length y<1 approaches View the MathML source for View the MathML source. Thus, the whole genome is certain to be lost, but the rate of loss is extremely slow. This solution extends to give the whole distribution of surviving block sizes as a function of time. We show that the expected number of blocks at time t is 1+yt and give expressions for the moments of the number of blocks and the total amount of genome that survives for a given time. The solution is based on a branching process and assumes complete interference between crossovers, so that each descendant carries only a single block of ancestral material. We consider cases where most individuals carry multiple blocks, either because there are multiple crossovers in a long genetic map, or because enough time has passed that most individuals in the population are related to each other. For species such as ours, which have a long genetic map, the genome of any individual which leaves descendants (∼80% of the population for a Poisson offspring number with mean two) is likely to persist for an extremely long time, in the form of a few short blocks of genome. AU - Baird, Stuart J AU - Nicholas Barton AU - Etheridge, Alison M ID - 3619 IS - 4 JF - Theoretical Population Biology TI - The distribution of surviving blocks of an ancestral genome VL - 64 ER - TY - JOUR AB - There are several analyses in evolutionary ecology which assume that a family of offspring has come from only two parents. Here, we present a simple test for detecting when a batch involves two or more subfamilies. It is based on the fact that the mixing of families generates associations amongst unlinked marker loci. We also present simulations illustrating the power of our method for varying numbers of loci, alleles per locus and genotyped individuals. AU - Vines, Timothy H AU - Nicholas Barton ID - 3618 IS - 7 JF - Molecular Ecology TI - A new approach to detecting mixed families VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We use the lac operon in Escherichia coli as a prototype system to illustrate the current state, applicability, and limitations of modeling the dynamics of cellular networks. We integrate three different levels of description (molecular, cellular, and that of cell population) into a single model, which seems to capture many experimental aspects of the system. AU - Vilar,Jose M AU - Calin Guet AU - Leibler, Stanislas ID - 3752 IS - 3 JF - Journal of Cell Biology TI - Modeling network dynamics: the lac operon, a case study VL - 161 ER -