@article{11120, abstract = {The nuclear envelope (NE) is a highly specialized membrane that delineates the eukaryotic cell nucleus. It is composed of the inner and outer nuclear membranes, nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) and, in metazoa, the lamina. The NE not only regulates the trafficking of macromolecules between nucleoplasm and cytosol but also provides anchoring sites for chromatin and the cytoskeleton. Through these interactions, the NE helps position the nucleus within the cell and chromosomes within the nucleus, thereby regulating the expression of certain genes. The NE is not static, rather it is continuously remodeled during cell division. The most dramatic example of NE reorganization occurs during mitosis in metazoa when the NE undergoes a complete cycle of disassembly and reformation. Despite the importance of the NE for eukaryotic cell life, relatively little is known about its biogenesis or many of its functions. We thus are far from understanding the molecular etiology of a diverse group of NE-associated diseases.}, author = {HETZER, Martin W and Walther, Tobias C. and Mattaj, Iain W.}, issn = {1530-8995}, journal = {Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology}, keywords = {Cell Biology, Developmental Biology}, pages = {347--380}, publisher = {Annual Reviews}, title = {{Pushing the envelope: Structure, function, and dynamics of the nuclear periphery}}, doi = {10.1146/annurev.cellbio.21.090704.151152}, volume = {21}, year = {2005}, } @inproceedings{11698, abstract = {We give a short survey of the use of hyperlink analysis in web search engine ranking and sketch other applications of hyperlink analysis in the web space.}, author = {Henzinger, Monika H}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia}, isbn = {9781595931689}, keywords = {Hyperlink Analysis, World Wide Web}, location = {Salzburg, Austria}, pages = {1--3}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Hyperlink analysis on the world wide web}}, doi = {10.1145/1083356.1083357}, year = {2005}, } @article{11904, abstract = {Many daily activities present information in the form of a stream of text, and often people can benefit from additional information on the topic discussed. TV broadcast news can be treated as one such stream of text; in this paper we discuss finding news articles on the web that are relevant to news currently being broadcast. We evaluated a variety of algorithms for this problem, looking at the impact of inverse document frequency, stemming, compounds, history, and query length on the relevance and coverage of news articles returned in real time during a broadcast. We also evaluated several postprocessing techniques for improving the precision, including reranking using additional terms, reranking by document similarity, and filtering on document similarity. For the best algorithm, 84–91% of the articles found were relevant, with at least 64% of the articles being on the exact topic of the broadcast. In addition, a relevant article was found for at least 70% of the topics.}, author = {Henzinger, Monika H and Chang, Bay-Wei and Milch, Brian and Brin, Sergey}, issn = {1573-1413}, journal = {World Wide Web}, number = {2}, pages = {101--126}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Query-free news search}}, doi = {10.1007/s11280-004-4870-6}, volume = {8}, year = {2005}, } @article{11763, abstract = {We present the first polylog-competitive online algorithm for the general multicast admission control and routing problem in the throughput model. The ratio of the number of requests accepted by the optimum offline algorithm to the expected number of requests accepted by our algorithm is O((log n + log log M)(log n + log M) log n), where M is the number of multicast groups and n is the number of nodes in the graph. We show that this is close to optimum by presenting an Ω(log n log M) lower bound on this ratio for any randomized online algorithm against an oblivious adversary, when M is much larger than the link capacities. Our lower bound applies even in the restricted case where the link capacities are much larger than bandwidth requested by a single multicast. We also present a simple proof showing that it is impossible to be competitive against an adaptive online adversary. As in the previous online routing algorithms, our algorithm uses edge-costs when deciding on which is the best path to use. In contrast to the previous competitive algorithms in the throughput model, our cost is not a direct function of the edge load. The new cost definition allows us to decouple the effects of routing and admission decisions of different multicast groups.}, author = {Goel, Ashish and Henzinger, Monika H and Plotkin, Serge}, issn = {0196-6774}, journal = {Journal of Algorithms}, number = {1}, pages = {1--20}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{An online throughput-competitive algorithm for multicast routing and admission control}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jalgor.2004.11.001}, volume = {55}, year = {2005}, } @article{12657, abstract = {An enhanced temperature-index glacier melt model, incorporating incoming shortwave radiation and albedo, is presented. The model is an attempt to combine the high temporal resolution and accuracy of physically based melt models with the lower data requirements and computational simplicity of empirical melt models, represented by the ‘degree-day’ method and its variants. The model is run with both measured and modelled radiation data, to test its applicability to glaciers with differing data availability. Five automatic weather stations were established on Haut Glacier d’Arolla, Switzerland, between May and September 2001. Reference surface melt rates were calculated using a physically based energy-balance melt model. The performance of the enhanced temperature-index model was tested at each of the four validation stations by comparing predicted hourly melt rates with reference melt rates. Predictions made with three other temperature-index models were evaluated in the same way for comparison. The enhanced temperature-index model offers significant improvements over the other temperature-index models, and accounts for 90–95% of the variation in the reference melt rate. The improvement is lower, but still significant, when the model is forced by modelled shortwave radiation data, thus offering a better alternative to existing models that require only temperature data input.}, author = {Pellicciotti, Francesca and Brock, Ben and Strasser, Ulrich and Burlando, Paolo and Funk, Martin and Corripio, Javier}, issn = {1727-5652}, journal = {Journal of Glaciology}, number = {175}, pages = {573--587}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, title = {{An enhanced temperature-index glacier melt model including the shortwave radiation balance: Development and testing for Haut Glacier d’Arolla, Switzerland}}, doi = {10.3189/172756505781829124}, volume = {51}, year = {2005}, }