@article{2776, abstract = {We consider the ensemble of adjacency matrices of Erdős-Rényi random graphs, i.e. graphs on N vertices where every edge is chosen independently and with probability p ≡ p(N). We rescale the matrix so that its bulk eigenvalues are of order one. Under the assumption pN≫N2/3 , we prove the universality of eigenvalue distributions both in the bulk and at the edge of the spectrum. More precisely, we prove (1) that the eigenvalue spacing of the Erdős-Rényi graph in the bulk of the spectrum has the same distribution as that of the Gaussian orthogonal ensemble; and (2) that the second largest eigenvalue of the Erdős-Rényi graph has the same distribution as the largest eigenvalue of the Gaussian orthogonal ensemble. As an application of our method, we prove the bulk universality of generalized Wigner matrices under the assumption that the matrix entries have at least 4 + ε moments.}, author = {László Erdös and Knowles, Antti and Yau, Horng-Tzer and Yin, Jun}, journal = {Communications in Mathematical Physics}, number = {3}, pages = {587 -- 640}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Spectral statistics of Erdős-Rényi graphs II: Eigenvalue spacing and the extreme eigenvalues}}, doi = {10.1007/s00220-012-1527-7}, volume = {314}, year = {2012}, } @article{2774, abstract = {We consider a large neutral molecule with total nuclear charge Z in non-relativistic quantum mechanics with a self-generated classical electromagnetic field. To ensure stability, we assume that Zα 2 ≤ κ 0 for a sufficiently small κ 0, where α denotes the fine structure constant. We show that, in the simultaneous limit Z → ∞, α → 0 such that κ = Zα 2 is fixed, the ground state energy of the system is given by a two term expansion c 1Z 7/3 + c 2(κ) Z 2 + o(Z 2). The leading term is given by the non-magnetic Thomas-Fermi theory. Our result shows that the magnetic field affects only the second (so-called Scott) term in the expansion.}, author = {László Erdös and Fournais, Søren and Solovej, Jan P}, journal = {Communications in Mathematical Physics}, number = {3}, pages = {847 -- 882}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Scott correction for large atoms and molecules in a self-generated magnetic field}}, doi = {10.1007/s00220-012-1468-1}, volume = {312}, year = {2012}, } @article{2773, abstract = {Recently we proved [3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11] that the eigenvalue correlation functions of a general class of random matrices converge, weakly with respect to the energy, to the corresponding ones of Gaussian matrices. Tao and Vu [15] gave a proof that for the special case of Hermitian Wigner matrices the convergence can be strengthened to vague convergence at any fixed energy in the bulk. In this article we show that this theorem is an immediate corollary of our earlier results. Indeed, a more general form of this theorem also follows directly from our work [2].}, author = {László Erdös and Yau, Horng-Tzer}, journal = {Electronic Journal of Probability}, publisher = {Institute of Mathematical Statistics}, title = {{A comment on the Wigner-Dyson-Mehta bulk universality conjecture for Wigner matrices}}, doi = {10.1214/EJP.v17-1779}, volume = {17}, year = {2012}, } @article{2771, abstract = {We consider a magnetic Schrödinger operator in two dimensions. The magnetic field is given as the sum of a large and constant magnetic field and a random magnetic field. Moreover, we allow for an additional deterministic potential as well as a magnetic field which are both periodic. We show that the spectrum of this operator is contained in broadened bands around the Landau levels and that the edges of these bands consist of pure point spectrum with exponentially decaying eigenfunctions. The proof is based on a recent Wegner estimate obtained in Erdos and Hasler (Commun. Math. Phys., preprint, arXiv:1012.5185) and a multiscale analysis.}, author = {László Erdös and Hasler, David G}, journal = {Journal of Statistical Physics}, number = {5}, pages = {900 -- 923}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Anderson localization at band edges for random magnetic fields}}, doi = {10.1007/s10955-012-0445-6}, volume = {146}, year = {2012}, } @article{2778, abstract = {We prove the bulk universality of the β-ensembles with non-convex regular analytic potentials for any β > 0. This removes the convexity assumption appeared in the earlier work [P. Bourgade, L. Erdös, and H.-T. Yau, Universality of general β-ensembles, preprint arXiv:0907.5605 (2011)]. The convexity condition enabled us to use the logarithmic Sobolev inequality to estimate events with small probability. The new idea is to introduce a "convexified measure" so that the local statistics are preserved under this convexification.}, author = {Bourgade, Paul and László Erdös and Yau, Horng-Tzer}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Physics}, number = {9}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, title = {{Bulk universality of general β-ensembles with non-convex potential}}, doi = {10.1063/1.4751478}, volume = {53}, year = {2012}, } @article{2779, abstract = {We consider a two-dimensional magnetic Schrödinger operator on a square lattice with a spatially stationary random magnetic field. We prove Anderson localization near the spectral edges. We use a new approach to establish a Wegner estimate that does not rely on the monotonicity of the energy on the random parameters.}, author = {László Erdös and Hasler, David G}, journal = {Annales Henri Poincare}, number = {8}, pages = {1719 -- 1731}, publisher = {Birkhäuser}, title = {{Wegner estimate for random magnetic Laplacian on ℤ 2}}, doi = {10.1007/s00023-012-0177-9}, volume = {13}, year = {2012}, } @article{2802, abstract = {When a binary fluid demixes under a slow temperature ramp, nucleation, coarsening and sedimentation of droplets lead to an oscillatory evolution of the phase-separating system. The advection of the sedimenting droplets is found to be chaotic. The flow is driven by density differences between two phases. Here, we show how image processing can be combined with particle tracking to resolve droplet size and velocity simultaneously. Droplets are used as tracer particles, and the sedimentation velocity is determined. Taking these effects into account, droplets with radii in the range of 4-40 μm are detected and tracked. Based on these data, we resolve the oscillations in the droplet size distribution that are coupled to the convective flow.}, author = {Lapp, Tobias and Rohloff, Martin and Vollmer, Jürgen T and Björn Hof}, journal = {Experiments in Fluids}, number = {5}, pages = {1187 -- 1200}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Particle tracking for polydisperse sedimenting droplets in phase separation}}, doi = {10.1007/s00348-011-1243-7}, volume = {52}, year = {2012}, } @article{2803, abstract = {Recent numerical studies suggest that in pipe and related shear flows, the region of phase space separating laminar from turbulent motion is organized by a chaotic attractor, called an edge state, which mediates the transition process. We here confirm the existence of the edge state in laboratory experiments. We observe that it governs the dynamics during the decay of turbulence underlining its potential relevance for turbulence control. In addition we unveil two unstable traveling wave solutions underlying the experimental flow fields. This observation corroborates earlier suggestions that unstable solutions organize turbulence and its stability border.}, author = {de Lózar, Alberto and Mellibovsky, Fernando and Avila, Marc and Björn Hof}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {21}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Edge state in pipe flow experiments}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.214502}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @article{2804, abstract = {The analysis of the size distribution of droplets condensing on a substrate (breath figures) is a test ground for scaling theories. Here, we show that a faithful description of these distributions must explicitly deal with the growth mechanisms of the droplets. This finding establishes a gateway connecting nucleation and growth of the smallest droplets on surfaces to gross features of the evolution of the droplet size distribution}, author = {Blaschke, Johannes and Lapp, Tobias and Björn Hof and Vollmer, Jürgen T}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {6}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Breath figures: Nucleation, growth, coalescence, and the size distribution of droplets}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.068701}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2825, abstract = {We study the problem of maximum marginal prediction (MMP) in probabilistic graphical models, a task that occurs, for example, as the Bayes optimal decision rule under a Hamming loss. MMP is typically performed as a two-stage procedure: one estimates each variable's marginal probability and then forms a prediction from the states of maximal probability. In this work we propose a simple yet effective technique for accelerating MMP when inference is sampling-based: instead of the above two-stage procedure we directly estimate the posterior probability of each decision variable. This allows us to identify the point of time when we are sufficiently certain about any individual decision. Whenever this is the case, we dynamically prune the variables we are confident about from the underlying factor graph. Consequently, at any time only samples of variables whose decision is still uncertain need to be created. Experiments in two prototypical scenarios, multi-label classification and image inpainting, show that adaptive sampling can drastically accelerate MMP without sacrificing prediction accuracy.}, author = {Lampert, Christoph}, location = {Lake Tahoe, NV, United States}, pages = {82 -- 90}, publisher = {Neural Information Processing Systems}, title = {{Dynamic pruning of factor graphs for maximum marginal prediction}}, volume = {1}, year = {2012}, } @article{2848, abstract = {We study evolutionary game theory in a setting where individuals learn from each other. We extend the traditional approach by assuming that a population contains individuals with different learning abilities. In particular, we explore the situation where individuals have different search spaces, when attempting to learn the strategies of others. The search space of an individual specifies the set of strategies learnable by that individual. The search space is genetically given and does not change under social evolutionary dynamics. We introduce a general framework and study a specific example in the context of direct reciprocity. For this example, we obtain the counter intuitive result that cooperation can only evolve for intermediate benefit-to-cost ratios, while small and large benefit-to-cost ratios favor defection. Our paper is a step toward making a connection between computational learning theory and evolutionary game dynamics.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Zufferey, Damien and Nowak, Martin}, journal = {Journal of Theoretical Biology}, pages = {161 -- 173}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Evolutionary game dynamics in populations with different learners}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jtbi.2012.02.021}, volume = {301}, year = {2012}, } @article{2849, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Strelkova, Nataliya}, journal = {Russian Mathematical Surveys}, number = {6}, pages = {1167 -- 1168}, publisher = {IOP Publishing Ltd.}, title = {{On the configuration space of Steiner minimal trees}}, doi = {10.1070/RM2012v067n06ABEH004820}, volume = {67}, year = {2012}, } @article{2876, abstract = {Cytokinin (CK) activity is regulated by the complex interplay of their metabolism, transport, stability and cellular/tissue localization. O-glucosides of zeatin-type CKs are postulated to be storage and/or transport forms. Active CK levels are determined in part by their differential distribution of CK metabolites across different subcellular compartments. We have previously shown that overexpressing chloroplast-localized Zm-p60.1, a maize β-glucosidase capable of releasing active cytokinins from their O- and N3-glucosides, perturbs CK homeostasis in transgenic tobacco. We obtained tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L., cv Petit Havana SR1) plants overexpressing a recombinant Zm-p60.1 that is targeted to the vacuole. The protein is correctly processed and localized to the vacuole. When grown on medium containing exogenous zeatin, transgenic seedlings rapidly accumulate fresh weight due to ectopic growths at the base of the hypocotyl. The presence of the enzyme in these ectopic structures is shown by histochemical staining. CK quantification reveals that these transgenic seedlings are unable to accumulate zeatin-O-glucoside to levels similar to those observed in the wild type. When crossed with tobacco overexpressing the zeatin-O-glucosyltransferase gene from Phaseolus, the vacuolar variant shows an almost complete reversion in the root elongation assay. This is the first evidence from intact plants that the vacuole is the storage organelle for CK O-glucosides and that they are available to attack by Zm-p60.1. We propose the use of Zm-p60.1 as a robust molecular tool that exploits the reversibility of O-glucosylation and enables delicate manipulations of active CK content at the cellular level.}, author = {Kiran, Nagavalli S and Eva Benková and Reková, Alena and Dubová, Jaroslava and Malbeck, Jiří and Palme, Klaus and Brzobohatý, Břetislav}, journal = {Phytochemistry}, pages = {67 -- 77}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Retargeting a maize β-glucosidase to the vacuole - Evidence from intact plants that zeatin-O-glucoside is stored in the vacuole}}, doi = {10.1016/j.phytochem.2012.03.012}, volume = {79}, year = {2012}, } @article{2875, abstract = {Phytohormones are important plant growth regulators that control many developmental processes, such as cell division, cell differentiation, organogenesis and morphogenesis. They regulate a multitude of apparently unrelated physiological processes, often with overlapping roles, and they mutually modulate their effects. These features imply important synergistic and antagonistic interactions between the various plant hormones. Auxin and cytokinin are central hormones involved in the regulation of plant growth and development, including processes determining root architecture, such as root pole establishment during early embryogenesis, root meristem maintenance and lateral root organogenesis. Thus, to control root development both pathways put special demands on the mechanisms that balance their activities and mediate their interactions. Here, we summarize recent knowledge on the role of auxin and cytokinin in the regulation of root architecture with special focus on lateral root organogenesis, discuss the latest findings on the molecular mechanisms of their interactions, and present forward genetic screen as a tool to identify novel molecular components of the auxin and cytokinin crosstalk.}, author = {Bielach, Agnieszka and Duclercq, Jérôme and Peter Marhavy and Eva Benková}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences}, number = {1595}, pages = {1469 -- 1478}, publisher = {Royal Society, The}, title = {{Genetic approach towards the identification of auxin - cytokinin crosstalk components involved in root development}}, doi = {10.1098/rstb.2011.0233}, volume = {367}, year = {2012}, } @article{2878, abstract = {Phyllotaxis, the regular arrangement of leaves and flowers around the stem, is a key feature of plant architecture. Current models propose that the spatiotemporal regulation of organ initiation is controlled by a positive feedback loop between the plant hormone auxin and its efflux carrier PIN-FORMED1 (PIN1). Consequently, pin1 mutants give rise to naked inflorescence stalks with few or no flowers, indicating that PIN1 plays a crucial role in organ initiation. However, pin1 mutants do produce leaves. In order to understand the regulatory mechanisms controlling leaf initiation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) rosettes, we have characterized the vegetative pin1 phenotype in detail. We show that although the timing of leaf initiation in vegetative pin1 mutants is variable and divergence angles clearly deviate from the canonical 137° value, leaves are not positioned at random during early developmental stages. Our data further indicate that other PIN proteins are unlikely to explain the persistence of leaf initiation and positioning during pin1 vegetative development. Thus, phyllotaxis appears to be more complex than suggested by current mechanistic models.}, author = {Guenot, Bernadette and Bayer, Emmanuelle and Kierzkowski, Daniel and Smith, Richard S and Mandel, Therese and Žádníková, Petra and Eva Benková and Kuhlemeier, Cris}, journal = {Plant Physiology}, number = {4}, pages = {1501 -- 1510}, publisher = {American Society of Plant Biologists}, title = {{Pin1 independent leaf initiation in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1104/pp.112.200402}, volume = {159}, year = {2012}, } @article{2879, abstract = {Hormones, such as auxin and cytokinin, are involved in the complex molecular network that regulates the coordinated development of plant organs. Genes controlling ovule patterning have been identified and studied in detail; however, the roles of auxin and cytokinin in ovule development are largely unknown. Here we show that key cytokinin pathway genes, such as isopentenyltransferase and cytokinin receptors, are expressed during ovule development. Also, in a cre1-12 ahk2-2 ahk3-3 triple mutant with severely reduced cytokinin perception, expression of the auxin efflux facilitator PIN-FORMED 1 (PIN1) was severely reduced. In sporocyteless/nozzle (spl/nzz) mutants, which show a similar phenotype to the cre1-12 ahk2-2 ahk3-3 triple mutant, PIN1 expression is also reduced. Treatment with the exogenous cytokinin N6-benzylaminopurine also altered both auxin distribution and patterning of the ovule; this process required the homeodomain transcription factor BELL1 (BEL1). Thus, this article shows that cytokinin regulates ovule development through the regulation of PIN1. Furthermore, the transcription factors BEL1 and SPL/NZZ, previously described as key regulators of ovule development, are needed for the auxin and cytokinin signaling pathways for the correct patterning of the ovule.}, author = {Bencivenga, Stefano and Simonini, Sara and Eva Benková and Colombo, Lucia}, journal = {Plant Cell}, number = {7}, pages = {2886 -- 2897}, publisher = {American Society of Plant Biologists}, title = {{The transcription factors BEL1 and SPL are required for cytokinin and auxin signaling during ovule development in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1105/tpc.112.100164}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2891, abstract = {Quantitative automata are nondeterministic finite automata with edge weights. They value a run by some function from the sequence of visited weights to the reals, and value a word by its minimal/maximal run. They generalize boolean automata, and have gained much attention in recent years. Unfortunately, important automaton classes, such as sum, discounted-sum, and limit-average automata, cannot be determinized. Yet, the quantitative setting provides the potential of approximate determinization. We define approximate determinization with respect to a distance function, and investigate this potential. We show that sum automata cannot be determinized approximately with respect to any distance function. However, restricting to nonnegative weights allows for approximate determinization with respect to some distance functions. Discounted-sum automata allow for approximate determinization, as the influence of a word’s suffix is decaying. However, the naive approach, of unfolding the automaton computations up to a sufficient level, is shown to be doubly exponential in the discount factor. We provide an alternative construction that is singly exponential in the discount factor, in the precision, and in the number of states. We prove matching lower bounds, showing exponential dependency on each of these three parameters. Average and limit-average automata are shown to prohibit approximate determinization with respect to any distance function, and this is the case even for two weights, 0 and 1.}, author = {Boker, Udi and Henzinger, Thomas A}, booktitle = {Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics}, location = {Hyderabad, India}, pages = {362 -- 373}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik}, title = {{Approximate determinization of quantitative automata}}, doi = {10.4230/LIPIcs.FSTTCS.2012.362}, volume = {18}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2890, abstract = {Systems are often specified using multiple requirements on their behavior. In practice, these requirements can be contradictory. The classical approach to specification, verification, and synthesis demands more detailed specifications that resolve any contradictions in the requirements. These detailed specifications are usually large, cumbersome, and hard to maintain or modify. In contrast, quantitative frameworks allow the formalization of the intuitive idea that what is desired is an implementation that comes "closest" to satisfying the mutually incompatible requirements, according to a measure of fit that can be defined by the requirements engineer. One flexible framework for quantifying how "well" an implementation satisfies a specification is offered by simulation distances that are parameterized by an error model. We introduce this framework, study its properties, and provide an algorithmic solution for the following quantitative synthesis question: given two (or more) behavioral requirements specified by possibly incompatible finite-state machines, and an error model, find the finite-state implementation that minimizes the maximal simulation distance to the given requirements. Furthermore, we generalize the framework to handle infinite alphabets (for example, realvalued domains). We also demonstrate how quantitative specifications based on simulation distances might lead to smaller and easier to modify specifications. Finally, we illustrate our approach using case studies on error correcting codes and scheduler synthesis.}, author = {Cerny, Pavol and Gopi, Sivakanth and Henzinger, Thomas A and Radhakrishna, Arjun and Totla, Nishant}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the tenth ACM international conference on Embedded software}, location = {Tampere, Finland}, pages = {53 -- 62}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Synthesis from incompatible specifications}}, doi = {10.1145/2380356.2380371}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2888, abstract = {Formal verification aims to improve the quality of hardware and software by detecting errors before they do harm. At the basis of formal verification lies the logical notion of correctness, which purports to capture whether or not a circuit or program behaves as desired. We suggest that the boolean partition into correct and incorrect systems falls short of the practical need to assess the behavior of hardware and software in a more nuanced fashion against multiple criteria.}, author = {Henzinger, Thomas A}, booktitle = {Conference proceedings MODELS 2012}, location = {Innsbruck, Austria}, pages = {1 -- 2}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Quantitative reactive models}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-33666-9_1}, volume = {7590}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2903, abstract = {In order to enjoy a digital version of the Jordan Curve Theorem, it is common to use the closed topology for the foreground and the open topology for the background of a 2-dimensional binary image. In this paper, we introduce a single topology that enjoys this theorem for all thresholds decomposing a real-valued image into foreground and background. This topology is easy to construct and it generalizes to n-dimensional images.}, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Symonova, Olga}, location = {New Brunswick, NJ, USA }, pages = {41 -- 48}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{The adaptive topology of a digital image}}, doi = {10.1109/ISVD.2012.11}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2916, abstract = {The classical (boolean) notion of refinement for behavioral interfaces of system components is the alternating refinement preorder. In this paper, we define a quantitative measure for interfaces, called interface simulation distance. It makes the alternating refinement preorder quantitative by, intu- itively, tolerating errors (while counting them) in the alternating simulation game. We show that the interface simulation distance satisfies the triangle inequality, that the distance between two interfaces does not increase under parallel composition with a third interface, and that the distance between two interfaces can be bounded from above and below by distances between abstractions of the two interfaces. We illustrate the framework, and the properties of the distances under composition of interfaces, with two case studies.}, author = {Cerny, Pavol and Chmelik, Martin and Henzinger, Thomas A and Radhakrishna, Arjun}, booktitle = {Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science}, location = {Napoli, Italy}, pages = {29 -- 42}, publisher = {EPTCS}, title = {{Interface Simulation Distances}}, doi = {10.4204/EPTCS.96.3}, volume = {96}, year = {2012}, } @article{2917, abstract = {The search for extra-terrestrial intelligence (SETI) has been performed principally as a one-way survey, listening of radio frequencies across the Milky Way and other galaxies. However, scientists have engaged in an active messaging only rarely. This suggests the simple rationale that if other civilizations exist and take a similar approach to ours, namely listening but not broadcasting, the result is a silent universe. A simple game theoretical model, the prisoner's dilemma, explains this situation: each player (civilization) can passively search (defect), or actively search and broadcast (cooperate). In order to maximize the payoff (or, equivalently, minimize the risks) the best strategy is not to broadcast. In fact, the active search has been opposed on the basis that it might be dangerous to expose ourselves. However, most of these ideas have not been based on objective arguments, and ignore accounting of the possible gains and losses. Thus, the question stands: should we perform an active search? I develop a game-theoretical framework where civilizations can be of different types, and explicitly apply it to a situation where societies are either interested in establishing a two-way communication or belligerent and in urge to exploit ours. The framework gives a quantitative solution (a mixed-strategy), which is how frequent we should perform the active SETI. This frequency is roughly proportional to the inverse of the risk, and can be extremely small. However, given the immense amount of stars being scanned, it supports active SETI. The model is compared with simulations, and the possible actions are evaluated through the San Marino scale, measuring the risks of messaging.}, author = {Vladar, Harold}, journal = {International Journal of Astrobiology}, number = {1}, pages = {53 -- 62}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, title = {{The game of active search for extra terrestrial intelligence Breaking the Great Silence }}, doi = {10.1017/S1473550412000407}, volume = {12}, year = {2012}, } @article{2911, abstract = {We have selected problems that may not yet be well known, but have the potential to push the research in interesting directions. In particular, we state problems that do not require specific knowledge outside the standard circle of ideas in discrete geometry. Despite the relatively simple statements, these problems are related to current research and their solutions are likely to require new ideas and approaches. We have chosen problems from different fields to make this short paper attractive to a wide range of specialists.}, author = {Herbert Edelsbrunner and Ivanov, Alexander and Karasev, Roman}, journal = {Automatic Control and Computer Sciences}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Open problems in discrete and computational geometry}}, volume = {in print}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2930, abstract = {In this paper we investigate k-submodular functions. This natural family of discrete functions includes submodular and bisubmodular functions as the special cases k = 1 and k = 2 respectively. In particular we generalize the known Min-Max-Theorem for submodular and bisubmodular functions. This theorem asserts that the minimum of the (bi)submodular function can be found by solving a maximization problem over a (bi)submodular polyhedron. We define a k-submodular polyhedron, prove a Min-Max-Theorem for k-submodular functions, and give a greedy algorithm to construct the vertices of the polyhedron. }, author = {Huber, Anna and Kolmogorov, Vladimir}, location = {Athens, Greece}, pages = {451 -- 462}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Towards minimizing k-submodular functions}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-32147-4_40}, volume = {7422}, year = {2012}, } @unpublished{2928, abstract = { This paper addresses the problem of approximate MAP-MRF inference in general graphical models. Following [36], we consider a family of linear programming relaxations of the problem where each relaxation is specified by a set of nested pairs of factors for which the marginalization constraint needs to be enforced. We develop a generalization of the TRW-S algorithm [9] for this problem, where we use a decomposition into junction chains, monotonic w.r.t. some ordering on the nodes. This generalizes the monotonic chains in [9] in a natural way. We also show how to deal with nested factors in an efficient way. Experiments show an improvement over min-sum diffusion, MPLP and subgradient ascent algorithms on a number of computer vision and natural language processing problems. }, author = {Kolmogorov, Vladimir and Schoenemann, Thomas}, booktitle = {arXiv}, pages = {16}, publisher = {ArXiv}, title = {{Generalized sequential tree-reweighted message passing}}, year = {2012}, } @techreport{2929, author = {Vladimir Kolmogorov}, publisher = {Unknown}, title = {{The power of linear programming for valued CSPs: a constructive characterization}}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2937, abstract = {Developers building cryptography into security-sensitive applications face a daunting task. Not only must they understand the security guarantees delivered by the constructions they choose, they must also implement and combine them correctly and efficiently. Cryptographic compilers free developers from this task by turning high-level specifications of security goals into efficient implementations. Yet, trusting such tools is hard as they rely on complex mathematical machinery and claim security properties that are subtle and difficult to verify. In this paper we present ZKCrypt, an optimizing cryptographic compiler achieving an unprecedented level of assurance without sacrificing practicality for a comprehensive class of cryptographic protocols, known as Zero-Knowledge Proofs of Knowledge. The pipeline of ZKCrypt integrates purpose-built verified compilers and verifying compilers producing formal proofs in the CertiCrypt framework. By combining the guarantees delivered by each stage, ZKCrypt provides assurance that the output implementation securely realizes the abstract proof goal given as input. We report on the main characteristics of ZKCrypt, highlight new definitions and concepts at its foundations, and illustrate its applicability through a representative example of an anonymous credential system.}, author = {Almeida, José and Barbosa, Manuel and Bangerter, Endre and Barthe, Gilles and Krenn, Stephan and Béguelin, Santiago}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2012 ACM conference on Computer and communications security}, location = {Raleigh, NC, USA}, pages = {488 -- 500}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Full proof cryptography: Verifiable compilation of efficient zero-knowledge protocols}}, doi = {10.1145/2382196.2382249}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2936, abstract = {The notion of delays arises naturally in many computational models, such as, in the design of circuits, control systems, and dataflow languages. In this work, we introduce automata with delay blocks (ADBs), extending finite state automata with variable time delay blocks, for deferring individual transition output symbols, in a discrete-time setting. We show that the ADB languages strictly subsume the regular languages, and are incomparable in expressive power to the context-free languages. We show that ADBs are closed under union, concatenation and Kleene star, and under intersection with regular languages, but not closed under complementation and intersection with other ADB languages. We show that the emptiness and the membership problems are decidable in polynomial time for ADBs, whereas the universality problem is undecidable. Finally we consider the linear-time model checking problem, i.e., whether the language of an ADB is contained in a regular language, and show that the model checking problem is PSPACE-complete. Copyright 2012 ACM.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Henzinger, Thomas A and Prabhu, Vinayak}, booktitle = {roceedings of the tenth ACM international conference on Embedded software}, location = {Tampere, Finland}, pages = {43 -- 52}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Finite automata with time delay blocks}}, doi = {10.1145/2380356.2380370}, year = {2012}, } @article{2938, abstract = {Social insects have a very high potential to become invasive pest species. Here, we explore how their social lifestyle and their interaction with parasites may contribute to this invasive success. Similar to solitary species, parasite release followed by the evolution of increased competitive ability can promote establishment of introduced social insect hosts in their introduced range. Genetic bottlenecks during introduction of low numbers of founder individuals decrease the genetic diversity at three levels: the population, the colony and the individual, with the colony level being specific to social insects. Reduced genetic diversity can affect both the individual immune system and the collective colony-level disease defences (social immunity). Still, the dual immune system is likely to make social insects more robust to parasite attack. Changes in social structure from small, family-based, territorially aggressive societies in native populations towards huge networks of cooperating nests (unicoloniality) occur in some invasive social insects, for example, most invasive ants and some termites. Unicoloniality is likely to affect disease dynamics in multiple ways. The free exchange of individuals within the population leads to an increased genetic heterogeneity among individuals of a single nest, thereby decreasing disease transmission. However, the multitude of reproductively active queens per colony buffers the effect of individual diseased queens and their offspring, which may result in a higher level of vertical disease transmission in unicolonial societies. Lastly, unicoloniality provides a competitive advantage over native species, allowing them to quickly become the dominant species in the habitat, which in turn selects for parasite adaptation to this common host genotype and thus eventually a high parasite pressure. Overall, invasions by insect societies are characterized by general features applying to all introduced species, as well as idiosyncrasies that emerge from their social lifestyle. It is important to study these effects in concert to be able to develop efficient management and biocontrol strategies. © 2012 British Ecological Society.}, author = {Ugelvig, Line V and Cremer, Sylvia}, journal = {Functional Ecology}, number = {6}, pages = {1300 -- 1312}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Effects of social immunity and unicoloniality on host parasite interactions in invasive insect societies}}, doi = {10.1111/1365-2435.12013}, volume = {26}, year = {2012}, } @article{2931, abstract = {In this paper, we present a new approach for establishing correspondences between sparse image features related by an unknown nonrigid mapping and corrupted by clutter and occlusion, such as points extracted from images of different instances of the same object category. We formulate this matching task as an energy minimization problem by defining an elaborate objective function of the appearance and the spatial arrangement of the features. Optimization of this energy is an instance of graph matching, which is in general an NP-hard problem. We describe a novel graph matching optimization technique, which we refer to as dual decomposition (DD), and demonstrate on a variety of examples that this method outperforms existing graph matching algorithms. In the majority of our examples, DD is able to find the global minimum within a minute. The ability to globally optimize the objective allows us to accurately learn the parameters of our matching model from training examples. We show on several matching tasks that our learned model yields results superior to those of state-of-the-art methods. }, author = {Torresani, Lorenzo and Kolmogorov, Vladimir and Rother, Carsten}, journal = {IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence}, number = {2}, pages = {259 -- 271}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{A dual decomposition approach to feature correspondence}}, doi = {10.1109/TPAMI.2012.105}, volume = {35}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2942, abstract = {Interface theories provide a formal framework for component-based development of software and hardware which supports the incremental design of systems and the independent implementability of components. These capabilities are ensured through mathematical properties of the parallel composition operator and the refinement relation for components. More recently, a conjunction operation was added to interface theories in order to provide support for handling multiple viewpoints, requirements engineering, and component reuse. Unfortunately, the conjunction operator does not allow independent implementability in general. In this paper, we study conditions that need to be imposed on interface models in order to enforce independent implementability with respect to conjunction. We focus on multiple viewpoint specifications and propose a new compatibility criterion between two interfaces, which we call orthogonality. We show that orthogonal interfaces can be refined separately, while preserving both orthogonality and composability with other interfaces. We illustrate the independent implementability of different viewpoints with a FIFO buffer example.}, author = {Henzinger, Thomas A and Nickovic, Dejan}, booktitle = { Conference proceedings Monterey Workshop 2012}, location = {Oxford, UK}, pages = {380 -- 395}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Independent implementability of viewpoints}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-34059-8_20}, volume = {7539}, year = {2012}, } @article{2943, abstract = {We examine whether the Escherichia coli chromosome is folded into a self-adherent nucleoprotein complex, or alternately is a confined but otherwise unconstrained self-avoiding polymer. We address this through in vivo visualization, using an inducible GFP fusion to the nucleoid-associated protein Fis to non-specifically decorate the entire chromosome. For a range of different growth conditions, the chromosome is a compact structure that does not fill the volume of the cell, and which moves from the new pole to the cell centre. During rapid growth, chromosome segregation occurs well before cell division, with daughter chromosomes coupled by a thin inter-daughter filament before complete segregation, whereas during slow growth chromosomes stay adjacent until cell division occurs. Image correlation analysis indicates that sub-nucleoid structure is stable on a 1min timescale, comparable to the timescale for redistribution time measured for GFP-Fis after photobleaching. Optical deconvolution and writhe calculation analysis indicate that the nucleoid has a large-scale coiled organization rather than being an amorphous mass. Our observations are consistent with the chromosome having a self-adherent filament organization.}, author = {Hadizadeh Yazdi, Nastaran and Guet, Calin C and Johnson, Reid and Marko, John}, journal = {Molecular Microbiology}, number = {6}, pages = {1318 -- 1333}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Variation of the folding and dynamics of the Escherichia coli chromosome with growth conditions}}, doi = {10.1111/mmi.12071}, volume = {86}, year = {2012}, } @article{2941, author = {Dolbilin, Nikolai and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Musin, Oleg}, journal = {Russian Mathematical Surveys}, number = {4}, pages = {781 -- 783}, publisher = {IOP Publishing}, title = {{On the optimality of functionals over triangulations of Delaunay sets}}, doi = {10.1070/RM2012v067n04ABEH004807}, volume = {67}, year = {2012}, } @article{2946, abstract = {MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding RNAs that function in literally all cellular processes. miRNAs interact with Argonaute (Ago) proteins and guide them to specific target sites located in the 3′-untranslated region (3′-UTR) of target mRNAs leading to translational repression and deadenylation-induced mRNA degradation. Most miRNAs are processed from hairpin-structured precursors by the consecutive action of the RNase III enzymes Drosha and Dicer. However, processing of miR-451 is Dicer independent and cleavage is mediated by the endonuclease Ago2. Here we have characterized miR-451 sequence and structure requirements for processing as well as sorting of miRNAs into different Ago proteins. Pre-miR-451 appears to be optimized for Ago2 cleavage and changes result in reduced processing. In addition, we show that the mature miR-451 only associates with Ago2 suggesting that mature miRNAs are not exchanged between different members of the Ago protein family. Based on cloning and deep sequencing of endogenous miRNAs associated with Ago1-3, we do not find evidence for miRNA sorting in human cells. However, Ago identity appears to influence the length of some miRNAs, while others remain unaffected.}, author = {Dueck, Anne and Ziegler, Christian and Eichner, Alexander and Berezikov, Eugène and Meister, Gunter}, journal = {Nucleic Acids Research}, number = {19}, pages = {9850 -- 9862}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, title = {{MicroRNAs associated with the different human Argonaute proteins}}, doi = {10.1093/nar/gks705}, volume = {40}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2947, abstract = {We introduce games with probabilistic uncertainty, a model for controller synthesis in which the controller observes the state through imprecise sensors that provide correct information about the current state with a fixed probability. That is, in each step, the sensors return an observed state, and given the observed state, there is a probability distribution (due to the estimation error) over the actual current state. The controller must base its decision on the observed state (rather than the actual current state, which it does not know). On the other hand, we assume that the environment can perfectly observe the current state. We show that controller synthesis for qualitative ω-regular objectives in our model can be reduced in polynomial time to standard partial-observation stochastic games, and vice-versa. As a consequence we establish the precise decidability frontier for the new class of games, and establish optimal complexity results for all the decidable problems.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Chmelik, Martin and Majumdar, Ritankar}, location = {Thiruvananthapuram, India}, pages = {385 -- 399}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Equivalence of games with probabilistic uncertainty and partial observation games}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-33386-6_30}, volume = {7561}, year = {2012}, } @article{2945, abstract = {In search of foreign antigens, lymphocytes recirculate from the blood, through lymph nodes, into lymphatics and back to the blood. Dendritic cells also migrate to lymph nodes for optimal interaction with lymphocytes. This continuous trafficking of immune cells into and out of lymph nodes is essential for immune surveillance of foreign invaders. In this article, we review our current understanding of the functions of high endothelial venules (HEVs), stroma and lymphatics in the entry, positioning and exit of immune cells in lymph nodes during homeostasis, and we highlight the unexpected role of dendritic cells in the control of lymphocyte homing through HEVs.}, author = {Girard, Jean and Moussion, Christine and Förster, Reinhold}, journal = {Nature Reviews Immunology}, number = {11}, pages = {762 -- 773}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{HEVs, lymphatics and homeostatic immune cell trafficking in lymph nodes}}, doi = {10.1038/nri3298}, volume = {12}, year = {2012}, } @article{2949, author = {Dupret, David and Csicsvari, Jozsef L}, journal = {Nature Neuroscience}, number = {11}, pages = {1471 -- 1472}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{The medial entorhinal cortex keeps Up}}, doi = {10.1038/nn.3245}, volume = {15}, year = {2012}, } @article{2954, abstract = {Spontaneous postsynaptic currents (PSCs) provide key information about the mechanisms of synaptic transmission and the activity modes of neuronal networks. However, detecting spontaneous PSCs in vitro and in vivo has been challenging, because of the small amplitude, the variable kinetics, and the undefined time of generation of these events. Here, we describe a, to our knowledge, new method for detecting spontaneous synaptic events by deconvolution, using a template that approximates the average time course of spontaneous PSCs. A recorded PSC trace is deconvolved from the template, resulting in a series of delta-like functions. The maxima of these delta-like events are reliably detected, revealing the precise onset times of the spontaneous PSCs. Among all detection methods, the deconvolution-based method has a unique temporal resolution, allowing the detection of individual events in high-frequency bursts. Furthermore, the deconvolution-based method has a high amplitude resolution, because deconvolution can substantially increase the signal/noise ratio. When tested against previously published methods using experimental data, the deconvolution-based method was superior for spontaneous PSCs recorded in vivo. Using the high-resolution deconvolution-based detection algorithm, we show that the frequency of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents in dentate gyrus granule cells is 4.5 times higher in vivo than in vitro.}, author = {Pernia-Andrade, Alejandro and Goswami, Sarit and Stickler, Yvonne and Fröbe, Ulrich and Schlögl, Alois and Jonas, Peter M}, journal = {Biophysical Journal}, number = {7}, pages = {1429 -- 1439}, publisher = {Biophysical}, title = {{A deconvolution based method with high sensitivity and temporal resolution for detection of spontaneous synaptic currents in vitro and in vivo}}, doi = {10.1016/j.bpj.2012.08.039}, volume = {103}, year = {2012}, } @article{2950, abstract = {Contractile actomyosin rings drive various fundamental morphogenetic processes ranging from cytokinesis to wound healing. Actomyosin rings are generally thought to function by circumferential contraction. Here, we show that the spreading of the enveloping cell layer (EVL) over the yolk cell during zebrafish gastrulation is driven by a contractile actomyosin ring. In contrast to previous suggestions, we find that this ring functions not only by circumferential contraction but also by a flow-friction mechanism. This generates a pulling force through resistance against retrograde actomyosin flow. EVL spreading proceeds normally in situations where circumferential contraction is unproductive, indicating that the flow-friction mechanism is sufficient. Thus, actomyosin rings can function in epithelial morphogenesis through a combination of cable-constriction and flow-friction mechanisms.}, author = {Behrndt, Martin and Salbreux, Guillaume and Campinho, Pedro and Hauschild, Robert and Oswald, Felix and Roensch, Julia and Grill, Stephan and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {Science}, number = {6104}, pages = {257 -- 260}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Forces driving epithelial spreading in zebrafish gastrulation}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1224143}, volume = {338}, year = {2012}, } @article{2951, abstract = {Differential cell adhesion and cortex tension are thought to drive cell sorting by controlling cell-cell contact formation. Here, we show that cell adhesion and cortex tension have different mechanical functions in controlling progenitor cell-cell contact formation and sorting during zebrafish gastrulation. Cortex tension controls cell-cell contact expansion by modulating interfacial tension at the contact. By contrast, adhesion has little direct function in contact expansion, but instead is needed to mechanically couple the cortices of adhering cells at their contacts, allowing cortex tension to control contact expansion. The coupling function of adhesion is mediated by E-cadherin and limited by the mechanical anchoring of E-cadherin to the cortex. Thus, cell adhesion provides the mechanical scaffold for cell cortex tension to drive cell sorting during gastrulation.}, author = {Maître, Jean-Léon and Berthoumieux, Hélène and Krens, Gabriel and Salbreux, Guillaume and Julicher, Frank and Paluch, Ewa and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {Science}, number = {6104}, pages = {253 -- 256}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Adhesion functions in cell sorting by mechanically coupling the cortices of adhering cells}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1225399}, volume = {338}, year = {2012}, } @article{2952, abstract = {Body axis elongation represents a common and fundamental morphogenetic process in development. A key mechanism triggering body axis elongation without additional growth is convergent extension (CE), whereby a tissue undergoes simultaneous narrowing and extension. Both collective cell migration and cell intercalation are thought to drive CE and are used to different degrees in various species as they elongate their body axis. Here, we provide an overview of CE as a general strategy for body axis elongation and discuss conserved and divergent mechanisms underlying CE among different species.}, author = {Tada, Masazumi and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {Development}, number = {21}, pages = {3897 -- 3904}, publisher = {Company of Biologists}, title = {{Convergent extension Using collective cell migration and cell intercalation to shape embryos}}, doi = {10.1242/dev.073007}, volume = {139}, year = {2012}, } @article{2953, author = {Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J and Fässler, Reinhard}, journal = {Current Opinion in Cell Biology}, number = {5}, pages = {559 -- 561}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Cell-cell adhesion and extracellular matrix diversity counts}}, doi = {10.1016/j.ceb.2012.09.002}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @article{2958, abstract = {The activity of hippocampal pyramidal cells reflects both the current position of the animal and information related to its current behavior. Here we investigated whether single hippocampal neurons can encode several independent features defining trials during a memory task. We also tested whether task-related information is represented by partial remapping of the place cell population or, instead, via firing rate modulation of spatially stable place cells. To address these two questions, the activity of hippocampal neurons was recorded in rats performing a conditional discrimination task on a modified T-maze in which the identity of a food reward guided behavior. When the rat was on the central arm of the maze, the firing rate of pyramidal cells changed depending on two independent factors: (1) the identity of the food reward given to the animal and (2) the previous location of the animal on the maze. Importantly, some pyramidal cells encoded information relative to both factors. This trial-type specific and retrospective coding did not interfere with the spatial representation of the maze: hippocampal cells had stable place fields and their theta-phase precession profiles were unaltered during the task, indicating that trial-related information was encoded via rate remapping. During error trials, encoding of both trial-related information and spatial location was impaired. Finally, we found that pyramidal cells also encode trial-related information via rate remapping during the continuous version of the rewarded alternation task without delays. These results suggest that hippocampal neurons can encode several task-related cognitive aspects via rate remapping.}, author = {Allen, Kevin and Rawlins, J Nick and Bannerman, David and Csicsvari, Jozsef L}, journal = {Journal of Neuroscience}, number = {42}, pages = {14752 -- 14766}, publisher = {Society for Neuroscience}, title = {{Hippocampal place cells can encode multiple trial-dependent features through rate remapping}}, doi = {10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6175-11.2012}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{2959, abstract = {We study maximum likelihood estimation in Gaussian graphical models from a geometric point of view. An algebraic elimination criterion allows us to find exact lower bounds on the number of observations needed to ensure that the maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) exists with probability one. This is applied to bipartite graphs, grids and colored graphs. We also study the ML degree, and we present the first instance of a graph for which the MLE exists with probability one, even when the number of observations equals the treewidth.}, author = {Uhler, Caroline}, journal = {Annals of Statistics}, number = {1}, pages = {238 -- 261}, publisher = {Institute of Mathematical Statistics}, title = {{Geometry of maximum likelihood estimation in Gaussian graphical models}}, doi = {10.1214/11-AOS957}, volume = {40}, year = {2012}, } @article{2966, abstract = {Background: The outcome of male-male competition can be predicted from the relative fighting qualities of the opponents, which often depend on their age. In insects, freshly emerged and still sexually inactive males are morphologically indistinct from older, sexually active males. These young inactive males may thus be easy targets for older males if they cannot conceal themselves from their attacks. The ant Cardiocondyla obscurior is characterised by lethal fighting between wingless (" ergatoid" ) males. Here, we analyse for how long young males are defenceless after eclosion, and how early adult males can detect the presence of rival males.Results: We found that old ergatoid males consistently won fights against ergatoid males younger than two days. Old males did not differentiate between different types of unpigmented pupae several days before emergence, but had more frequent contact to ready-to-eclose pupae of female sexuals and winged males than of workers and ergatoid males. In rare cases, old ergatoid males displayed alleviated biting of pigmented ergatoid male pupae shortly before adult eclosion, as well as copulation attempts to dark pupae of female sexuals and winged males. Ergatoid male behaviour may be promoted by a closer similarity of the chemical profile of ready-to-eclose pupae to the profile of adults than that of young pupae several days prior to emergence.Conclusion: Young ergatoid males of C. obscurior would benefit greatly by hiding their identity from older, resident males, as they are highly vulnerable during the first two days of their adult lives. In contrast to the winged males of the same species, which are able to prevent ergatoid male attacks by chemical female mimicry, young ergatoids do not seem to be able to produce a protective chemical profile. Conflicts in male-male competition between ergatoid males of different age thus seem to be resolved in favour of the older males. This might represent selection at the colony level rather than the individual level. © 2012 Cremer et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.}, author = {Cremer, Sylvia and Suefuji, Masaki and Schrempf, Alexandra and Heinze, Jürgen}, journal = {BMC Ecology}, publisher = {BioMed Central}, title = {{The dynamics of male-male competition in Cardiocondyla obscurior ants}}, doi = {10.1186/1472-6785-12-7}, volume = {12}, year = {2012}, } @article{2962, abstract = {The choice of summary statistics is a crucial step in approximate Bayesian computation (ABC). Since statistics are often not sufficient, this choice involves a trade-off between loss of information and reduction of dimensionality. The latter may increase the efficiency of ABC. Here, we propose an approach for choosing summary statistics based on boosting, a technique from the machine learning literature. We consider different types of boosting and compare them to partial least squares regression as an alternative. To mitigate the lack of sufficiency, we also propose an approach for choosing summary statistics locally, in the putative neighborhood of the true parameter value. We study a demographic model motivated by the re-introduction of Alpine ibex (Capra ibex) into the Swiss Alps. The parameters of interest are the mean and standard deviation across microsatellites of the scaled ancestral mutation rate (θanc = 4 Ne u), and the proportion of males obtaining access to matings per breeding season (ω). By simulation, we assess the properties of the posterior distribution obtained with the various methods. According to our criteria, ABC with summary statistics chosen locally via boosting with the L2-loss performs best. Applying that method to the ibex data, we estimate θanc ≈ 1.288, and find that most of the variation across loci of the ancestral mutation rate u is between 7.7×10−4 and 3.5×10−3 per locus per generation. The proportion of males with access to matings is estimated to ω ≈ 0.21, which is in good agreement with recent independent estimates.}, author = {Aeschbacher, Simon and Beaumont, Mark and Futschik, Andreas}, journal = {Genetics}, number = {3}, pages = {1027 -- 1047}, publisher = {Genetics Society of America}, title = {{A novel approach for choosing summary statistics in approximate Bayesian computation}}, doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.143164}, volume = {192}, year = {2012}, } @article{2965, abstract = {Dieser Artikel soll die sechs verschiedenen Creative Commons Lizenzen erläutern und ihre Bedeutung im Rahmen des wissenschaftlichen Publizierens und des Open Access erklären (CC-BY, CC-BY-SA, CC-BY-NC, CC-BY-ND, CC-BYNC-SA, CC-BY-NC-ND).}, author = {Danowski, Patrick}, journal = {Mitteilungen der Vereinigung Österreichischer Bibliothekarinnen & Bibliothekare}, number = {2}, pages = {200 -- 212}, publisher = {VÖB}, title = {{Kontext Open Access: Creative Commons}}, volume = {65}, year = {2012}, } @article{2963, abstract = {Zebra finches are an ubiquitous model system for the study of vocal learning in animal communication. Their song has been well described, but its possible function(s) in social communication are only partly understood. The so-called ‘directed song’ is a high-intensity, high-performance song given during courtship in close proximity to the female, which is known to mediate mate choice and mating. However, this singing mode constitutes only a fraction of zebra finch males’ prolific song output. Potential communicative functions of their second, ‘undirected’ singing mode remain unresolved in the face of contradicting reports of both facilitating and inhibiting effects of social company on singing. We addressed this issue by experimentally manipulating social contexts in a within-subject design, comparing a solo versus male or female only company condition, each lasting for 24 hours. Males’ total song output was significantly higher when a conspecific was in audible and visible distance than when they were alone. Male and female company had an equally facilitating effect on song output. Our findings thus indicate that singing motivation is facilitated rather than inhibited by social company, suggesting that singing in zebra finches might function both in inter- and intrasexual communication. }, author = {Jesse, Fabienne and Riebel, Katharina}, journal = {Behavioural Processes}, number = {3}, pages = {262 -- 266}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Social facilitation of male song by male and female conspecifics in the zebra finch, Taeniopygia guttata}}, doi = {10.1016/j.beproc.2012.09.006}, volume = {91}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2974, abstract = {We construct a perfectly binding string commitment scheme whose security is based on the learning parity with noise (LPN) assumption, or equivalently, the hardness of decoding random linear codes. Our scheme not only allows for a simple and efficient zero-knowledge proof of knowledge for committed values (essentially a Σ-protocol), but also for such proofs showing any kind of relation amongst committed values, i.e. proving that messages m_0,...,m_u, are such that m_0=C(m_1,...,m_u) for any circuit C. To get soundness which is exponentially small in a security parameter t, and when the zero-knowledge property relies on the LPN problem with secrets of length l, our 3 round protocol has communication complexity O(t|C|l log(l)) and computational complexity of O(t|C|l) bit operations. The hidden constants are small, and the computation consists mostly of computing inner products of bit-vectors.}, author = {Jain, Abhishek and Krenn, Stephan and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z and Tentes, Aris}, editor = {Wang, Xiaoyun and Sako, Kazue}, location = {Beijing, China}, pages = {663 -- 680}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Commitments and efficient zero knowledge proofs from learning parity with noise}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-34961-4_40}, volume = {7658}, year = {2012}, } @article{2969, abstract = {The coupling between presynaptic Ca^(2+) channels and Ca^(2+) sensors of exocytosis is a key determinant of synaptic transmission. Evoked release from parvalbumin (PV)-expressing interneurons is triggered by nanodomain coupling of P/Q-type Ca^(2+) channels, whereas release from cholecystokinin (CCK)-containing interneurons is generated by microdomain coupling of N-type channels. Nanodomain coupling has several functional advantages, including speed and efficacy of transmission. One potential disadvantage is that stochastic opening of presynaptic Ca^(2+) channels may trigger spontaneous transmitter release. We addressed this possibility in rat hippocampal granule cells, which receive converging inputs from different inhibitory sources. Both reduction of extracellular Ca^(2+) concentration and the unselective Ca^(2+) channel blocker Cd^(2+) reduced the frequency of miniature IPSCs (mIPSCs) in granule cells by ~50%, suggesting that the opening of presynaptic Ca^(2+) channels contributes to spontaneous release. Application of the selective P/Q-type Ca^(2+) channel blocker ω-agatoxin IVa had no detectable effects, whereas both the N-type blocker ω-conotoxin GVIa and the L-type blocker nimodipine reduced mIPSC frequency. Furthermore, both the fast Ca^(2+) chelator BAPTA-AM and the slow chelator EGTA-AM reduced the mIPSC frequency, suggesting that Ca^(2+)-dependent spontaneous release is triggered by microdomain rather than nanodomain coupling. The CB_(1) receptor agonist WIN 55212-2 also decreased spontaneous release; this effect was occluded by prior application of ω-conotoxin GVIa, suggesting that a major fraction of Ca^(2+)-dependent spontaneous release was generated at the terminals of CCK-expressing interneurons. Tonic inhibition generated by spontaneous opening of presynaptic N- and L-type Ca^(2+) channels may be important for hippocampal information processing. }, author = {Goswami, Sarit and Bucurenciu, Iancu and Jonas, Peter M}, journal = {Journal of Neuroscience}, number = {41}, pages = {14294 -- 14304}, publisher = {Society for Neuroscience}, title = {{Miniature IPSCs in hippocampal granule cells are triggered by voltage-gated Ca^(2+) channels via microdomain coupling}}, doi = {10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6104-11.2012}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{2970, abstract = {Morphogen gradients regulate the patterning and growth of many tissues, hence a key question is how they are established and maintained during development. Theoretical descriptions have helped to explain how gradient shape is controlled by the rates of morphogen production, spreading and degradation. These effective rates have been measured using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) and photoactivation. To unravel which molecular events determine the effective rates, such tissue-level assays have been combined with genetic analysis, high-resolution assays, and models that take into account interactions with receptors, extracellular components and trafficking. Nevertheless, because of the natural and experimental data variability, and the underlying assumptions of transport models, it remains challenging to conclusively distinguish between cellular mechanisms.}, author = {Kicheva, Anna and Bollenbach, Mark Tobias and Wartlick, Ortrud and Julicher, Frank and Gonzalez Gaitan, Marcos}, journal = {Current Opinion in Genetics & Development}, number = {6}, pages = {527 -- 532}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Investigating the principles of morphogen gradient formation: from tissues to cells}}, doi = {10.1016/j.gde.2012.08.004}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2971, abstract = {We study the task of interactive semantic labeling of a segmentation hierarchy. To this end we propose a framework interleaving two components: an automatic labeling step, based on a Conditional Random Field whose dependencies are defined by the inclusion tree of the segmentation hierarchy, and an interaction step that integrates incremental input from a human user. Evaluated on two distinct datasets, the proposed interactive approach efficiently integrates human interventions and illustrates the advantages of structured prediction in an interactive framework. }, author = {Zankl, Georg and Haxhimusa, Yll and Ion, Adrian}, location = {Graz, Austria}, pages = {11 -- 20}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Interactive labeling of image segmentation hierarchies}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-32717-9_2}, volume = {7476}, year = {2012}, } @article{3105, abstract = {Growth and development are coordinated by an array of intercellular communications. Known plant signaling molecules include phytohormones and hormone peptides. Although both classes can be implicated in the same developmental processes, little is known about the interplay between phytohormone action and peptide signaling within the cellular microenvironment. We show that genes coding for small secretory peptides, designated GOLVEN (GLV), modulate the distribution of the phytohormone auxin. The deregulation of the GLV function impairs the formation of auxin gradients and alters the reorientation of shoots and roots after a gravity stimulus. Specifically, the GLV signal modulates the trafficking dynamics of the auxin efflux carrier PIN-FORMED2 involved in root tropic responses and meristem organization. Our work links the local action of secretory peptides with phytohormone transport. Root growth factor (RGF) or GOLVEN (GLV) secreted peptides have previously been implicated in meristem regulation. Whitford et al. now show that RGF/GLV peptides induce rapid relocalization of the auxin efflux regulator PIN2, regulate auxin gradients, and modulate auxin-dependent root responses to specific stimuli.}, author = {Whitford, Ryan and Fernandez, Ana and Tejos, Ricardo and Pérez, Amparo Cuéllar and Kleine-Vehn, Jürgen and Vanneste, Steffen and Drozdzecki, Andrzej and Leitner, Johannes and Abas, Lindy and Aerts, Maarten and Hoogewijs, Kurt and Pawel Baster and De Groodt, Ruth and Lin, Yao-Cheng and Storme, Véronique and Van de Peer, Yves and Beeckman, Tom and Madder, Annemieke and Devreese, Bart and Luschnig, Christian and Jirí Friml and Hilson, Pierre}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, number = {3}, pages = {678 -- 685}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{GOLVEN secretory peptides regulate auxin carrier turnover during plant gravitropic responses}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2012.02.002}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @article{3109, abstract = {Receptor-mediated endocytosis is an integral part of signal transduction as it mediates signal attenuation and provides spatial and temporal dimensions to signaling events. One of the best-studied leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases in plants, BRASSINOSTEROID INSENSITIVE 1 (BRI1), perceives its ligand, the brassinosteroid (BR) hormone, at the cell surface and is constitutively endocytosed. However, the importance of endocytosis for BR signaling remains unclear. Here we developed a bioactive, fluorescent BR analog, Alexa Fluor 647-castasterone (AFCS), and visualized the endocytosis of BRI1-AFCS complexes in living Arabidopsis thaliana cells. Impairment of endocytosis dependent on clathrin and the guanine nucleotide exchange factor for ARF GTPases (ARF-GEF) GNOM enhanced BR signaling by retaining active BRI1-ligand complexes at the plasma membrane. Increasing the trans-Golgi network/early endosome pool of BRI1-BR complexes did not affect BR signaling. Our findings provide what is to our knowledge the first visualization of receptor-ligand complexes in plants and reveal clathrin-and ARF-GEF-dependent endocytic regulation of BR signaling from the plasma membrane.}, author = {Irani, Niloufer G and Di Rubbo, Simone and Mylle, Evelien and Van Den Begin, Jos and Schneider-Pizoń, Joanna and Hniliková, Jaroslava and Šíša, Miroslav and Buyst, Dieter and Vilarrasa-Blasi, Josep and Szatmári, Anna-Maria and Van Damme, Daniël and Mishev, Kiril and Codreanu, Mirela-Corina and Kohout, Ladislav and Strnad, Miroslav and Caño-Delgado, Ana I and Jirí Friml and Madder, Annemieke and Russinova, Eugenia}, journal = {Nature Chemical Biology}, number = {6}, pages = {583 -- 589}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Fluorescent castasterone reveals BRI1 signaling from the plasma membrane}}, doi = {10.1038/nchembio.958}, volume = {8}, year = {2012}, } @article{3104, abstract = { Gradients of the plant hormone auxin, which depend on its active intercellular transport, are crucial for the maintenance of root meristematic activity. This directional transport is largely orchestrated by a complex interaction of specific influx and efflux carriers that mediate the auxin flow into and out of cells, respectively. Besides these transport proteins, plant-specific polyphenolic compounds knownasflavonols have beenshownto act as endogenous regulators of auxin transport. However, only limited information is available on how flavonol synthesis is developmentally regulated. Using reduction-of-function and overexpression approaches in parallel, we demonstrate that the WRKY23 transcription factor is needed for proper root growth and development by stimulating the local biosynthesis of flavonols. The expression of WRKY23 itself is controlled by auxin through the AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 7 (ARF7) and ARF19 transcriptional response pathway. Our results suggest a model in which WRKY23 is part of a transcriptional feedback loop of auxin on its own transport through local regulation of flavonol biosynthesis.}, author = {Grunewald, Wim and De Smet, Ive and Lewis, Daniel R and Löfke, Christian and Jansen, Leentje and Goeminne, Geert and Vanden Bossche, Robin and Karimi, Mansour and De Rybel, Bert and Vanholme, Bartel and Teichmann, Thomas and Boerjan, Wout and Van Montagu, Marc C and Gheysen, Godelieve and Muday, Gloria K and Jirí Friml and Beeckman, Tom}, journal = {PNAS}, number = {5}, pages = {1554 -- 1559}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Transcription factor WRKY23 assists auxin distribution patterns during Arabidopsis root development through local control on flavonol biosynthesis}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1121134109}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{3108, abstract = {The phytohormone auxin acts as a prominent signal, providing, by its local accumulation or depletion in selected cells, a spatial and temporal reference for changes in the developmental program. The distribution of auxin depends on both auxin metabolism (biosynthesis, conjugation and degradation) and cellular auxin transport. We identified in silico a novel putative auxin transport facilitator family, called PIN-LIKES (PILS). Here we illustrate that PILS proteins are required for auxin-dependent regulation of plant growth by determining the cellular sensitivity to auxin. PILS proteins regulate intracellular auxin accumulation at the endoplasmic reticulum and thus auxin availability for nuclear auxin signalling. PILS activity affects the level of endogenous auxin indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), presumably via intracellular accumulation and metabolism. Our findings reveal that the transport machinery to compartmentalize auxin within the cell is of an unexpected molecular complexity and demonstrate this compartmentalization to be functionally important for a number of developmental processes.}, author = {Barbez, Elke and Kubeš, Martin and Rolčík, Jakub and Béziat, Chloe and Pěnčík, Aleš and Wang, Bangjun and Rosquete, Michel Ruiz and Zhu, Jinsheng and Dobrev, Petre I and Lee, Yuree and Zašímalová, Eva and Petrášek, Jan and Geisler, Markus and Jirí Friml and Kleine-Vehn, Jürgen}, journal = {Nature}, number = {7396}, pages = {119 -- 122}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{A novel putative auxin carrier family regulates intracellular auxin homeostasis in plants}}, doi = {10.1038/nature11001}, volume = {485}, year = {2012}, } @article{3106, abstract = {Cell polarization via asymmetrical distribution of structures or molecules is essential for diverse cellular functions and development of organisms, but how polarity is developmentally controlled has been poorly understood. In plants, the asymmetrical distribution of the PIN-FORMED (PIN) proteins involved in the cellular efflux of the quintessential phytohormone auxin plays a central role in developmental patterning, morphogenesis, and differential growth. Recently we showed that auxin promotes cell interdigitation by activating the Rho family ROP GTPases in leaf epidermal pavement cells. Here we found that auxin activation of the ROP2 signaling pathway regulates the asymmetric distribution of PIN1 by inhibiting its endocytosis. ROP2 inhibits PIN1 endocytosis via the accumulation of cortical actin microfilaments induced by the ROP2 effector protein RIC4. Our findings suggest a link between the developmental auxin signal and polar PIN1 distribution via Rho-dependent cytoskeletal reorganization and reveal the conservation of a design principle for cell polarization that is based on Rho GTPase-mediated inhibition of endocytosis.}, author = {Nagawa, Shingo and Xu, Tongda and Lin, Deshu and Dhonukshe, Pankaj and Zhang, Xingxing and Jirí Friml and Scheres, Ben and Fu, Ying and Yang, Zhenbiao}, journal = {PLoS Biology}, number = {4}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{ROP GTPase-dependent actin microfilaments promote PIN1 polarization by localized inhibition of clathrin-dependent endocytosis}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pbio.1001299}, volume = {10}, year = {2012}, } @misc{3107, author = {Vanneste, Steffen and Friml, Jirí}, booktitle = {Nature Chemical Biology}, number = {5}, pages = {415 -- 416}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Plant signaling: Deconstructing auxin sensing}}, doi = {10.1038/nchembio.943}, volume = {8}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3119, abstract = {We present an approach for artist-directed animation of liquids using multiple levels of control over the simulation, ranging from the overall tracking of desired shapes to highly detailed secondary effects such as dripping streams, separating sheets of fluid, surface waves and ripples. The first portion of our technique is a volume preserving morph that allows the animator to produce a plausible fluid-like motion from a sparse set of control meshes. By rasterizing the resulting control meshes onto the simulation grid, the mesh velocities act as boundary conditions during the projection step of the fluid simulation. We can then blend this motion together with uncontrolled fluid velocities to achieve a more relaxed control over the fluid that captures natural inertial effects. Our method can produce highly detailed liquid surfaces with control over sub-grid details by using a mesh-based surface tracker on top of a coarse grid-based fluid simulation. We can create ripples and waves on the fluid surface attracting the surface mesh to the control mesh with spring-like forces and also by running a wave simulation over the surface mesh. Our video results demonstrate how our control scheme can be used to create animated characters and shapes that are made of water. }, author = {Raveendran, Karthik and Thuerey, Nils and Wojtan, Christopher J and Turk, Greg}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation}, location = {Aire-la-Ville, Switzerland}, pages = {255 -- 264}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Controlling liquids using meshes}}, year = {2012}, } @article{3118, abstract = {We present a method for recovering a temporally coherent, deforming triangle mesh with arbitrarily changing topology from an incoherent sequence of static closed surfaces. We solve this problem using the surface geometry alone, without any prior information like surface templates or velocity fields. Our system combines a proven strategy for triangle mesh improvement, a robust multi-resolution non-rigid registration routine, and a reliable technique for changing surface mesh topology. We also introduce a novel topological constraint enforcement algorithm to ensure that the output and input always have similar topology. We apply our technique to a series of diverse input data from video reconstructions, physics simulations, and artistic morphs. The structured output of our algorithm allows us to efficiently track information like colors and displacement maps, recover velocity information, and solve PDEs on the mesh as a post process.}, author = {Bojsen-Hansen, Morten and Li, Hao and Wojtan, Christopher J}, journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics}, number = {4}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Tracking surfaces with evolving topology}}, doi = {10.1145/2185520.2185549}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @article{3122, abstract = {Since Darwin's pioneering research on plant reproductive biology (e.g. Darwin 1877), understanding the mechanisms maintaining the diverse sexual strategies of plants has remained an important challenge for evolutionary biologists. In some species, populations are sexually polymorphic and contain two or more mating morphs (sex phenotypes). Differences in morphology or phenology among the morphs influence patterns of non-random mating. In these populations, negative frequency-dependent selection arising from disassortative (intermorph) mating is usually required for the evolutionary maintenance of sexual polymorphism, but few studies have demonstrated the required patterns of non-random mating. In the current issue of Molecular Ecology, Shang (2012) make an important contribution to our understanding of how disassortative mating influences sex phenotype ratios in Acer pictum subsp. mono (painted maple), a heterodichogamous, deciduous tree of eastern China. They monitored sex expression in 97 adults and used paternity analysis of open-pollinated seed to examine disassortative mating among three sex phenotypes. Using a deterministic 'pollen transfer' model, Shang et al. present convincing evidence that differences in the degree of disassortative mating in progeny arrays of the sex phenotypes can explain their uneven frequencies in the adult population. This study provides a useful example of how the deployment of genetic markers, demographic monitoring and modelling can be integrated to investigate the maintenance of sexual diversity in plants. }, author = {Field, David and Barrett, Spencer}, journal = {Molecular Ecology}, number = {15}, pages = {3640 -- 3643}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Disassortative mating and the maintenance of sexual polymorphism in painted maple}}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05643.x}, volume = {21}, year = {2012}, } @article{3121, abstract = {Voltage-activated Ca(2+) channels (VACCs) mediate Ca(2+) influx to trigger action potential-evoked neurotransmitter release, but the mechanism by which Ca(2+) regulates spontaneous transmission is unclear. We found that VACCs are the major physiological triggers for spontaneous release at mouse neocortical inhibitory synapses. Moreover, despite the absence of a synchronizing action potential, we found that spontaneous fusion of a GABA-containing vesicle required the activation of multiple tightly coupled VACCs of variable type.}, author = {Williams, Courtney and Chen, Wenyan and Lee, Chia and Yaeger, Daniel and Vyleta, Nicholas and Smith, Stephen}, journal = {Nature Neuroscience}, number = {9}, pages = {1195 -- 1197}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Coactivation of multiple tightly coupled calcium channels triggers spontaneous release of GABA}}, doi = {10.1038/nn.3162}, volume = {15}, year = {2012}, } @article{3120, abstract = {We introduce a strategy based on Kustin-Miller unprojection that allows us to construct many hundreds of Gorenstein codimension 4 ideals with 9 × 16 resolutions (that is, nine equations and sixteen first syzygies). Our two basic games are called Tom and Jerry; the main application is the biregular construction of most of the anticanonically polarised Mori Fano 3-folds of Altinok's thesis. There are 115 cases whose numerical data (in effect, the Hilbert series) allow a Type I projection. In every case, at least one Tom and one Jerry construction works, providing at least two deformation families of quasismooth Fano 3-folds having the same numerics but different topology. © 2012 Copyright Foundation Compositio Mathematica.}, author = {Brown, Gavin and Kerber, Michael and Reid, Miles}, journal = {Compositio Mathematica}, number = {4}, pages = {1171 -- 1194}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, title = {{Fano 3 folds in codimension 4 Tom and Jerry Part I}}, doi = {10.1112/S0010437X11007226}, volume = {148}, year = {2012}, } @article{3117, abstract = {We consider the problem of minimizing a function represented as a sum of submodular terms. We assume each term allows an efficient computation of exchange capacities. This holds, for example, for terms depending on a small number of variables, or for certain cardinality-dependent terms. A naive application of submodular minimization algorithms would not exploit the existence of specialized exchange capacity subroutines for individual terms. To overcome this, we cast the problem as a submodular flow (SF) problem in an auxiliary graph in such a way that applying most existing SF algorithms would rely only on these subroutines. We then explore in more detail Iwata's capacity scaling approach for submodular flows (Iwata 1997 [19]). In particular, we show how to improve its complexity in the case when the function contains cardinality-dependent terms.}, author = {Kolmogorov, Vladimir}, journal = {Discrete Applied Mathematics}, number = {15}, pages = {2246 -- 2258}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Minimizing a sum of submodular functions}}, doi = {10.1016/j.dam.2012.05.025}, volume = {160}, year = {2012}, } @article{3131, abstract = {In large populations, many beneficial mutations may be simultaneously available and may compete with one another, slowing adaptation. By finding the probability of fixation of a favorable allele in a simple model of a haploid sexual population, we find limits to the rate of adaptive substitution, Λ, that depend on simple parameter combinations. When variance in fitness is low and linkage is loose, the baseline rate of substitution is Λ 0=2NU〈s〉 is the population size, U is the rate of beneficial mutations per genome, and 〈s〉 is their mean selective advantage. Heritable variance ν in log fitness due to unlinked loci reduces Λ by e -4ν under polygamy and e -8ν under monogamy. With a linear genetic map of length R Morgans, interference is yet stronger. We use a scaling argument to show that the density of adaptive substitutions depends on s, N, U, and R only through the baseline density: Λ/R=F(Λ 0/R). Under the approximation that the interference due to different sweeps adds up, we show that Λ/R~(Λ 0/R)/(1+2Λ 0/R), implying that interference prevents the rate of adaptive substitution from exceeding one per centimorgan per 200 generations. Simulations and numerical calculations confirm the scaling argument and confirm the additive approximation for Λ 0/R 1; for higher Λ 0/R, the rate of adaptation grows above R/2, but only very slowly. We also consider the effect of sweeps on neutral diversity and show that, while even occasional sweeps can greatly reduce neutral diversity, this effect saturates as sweeps become more common-diversity can be maintained even in populations experiencing very strong interference. Our results indicate that for some organisms the rate of adaptive substitution may be primarily recombination-limited, depending only weakly on the mutation supply and the strength of selection.}, author = {Weissman, Daniel and Barton, Nicholas H}, journal = {PLoS Genetics}, number = {6}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Limits to the rate of adaptive substitution in sexual populations}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1002740}, volume = {8}, year = {2012}, } @article{3130, abstract = {Essential genes code for fundamental cellular functions required for the viability of an organism. For this reason, essential genes are often highly conserved across organisms. However, this is not always the case: orthologues of genes that are essential in one organism are sometimes not essential in other organisms or are absent from their genomes. This suggests that, in the course of evolution, essential genes can be rendered nonessential. How can a gene become non-essential? Here we used genetic manipulation to deplete the products of 26 different essential genes in Escherichia coli. This depletion results in a lethal phenotype, which could often be rescued by the overexpression of a non-homologous, non-essential gene, most likely through replacement of the essential function. We also show that, in a smaller number of cases, the essential genes can be fully deleted from the genome, suggesting that complete functional replacement is possible. Finally, we show that essential genes whose function can be replaced in the laboratory are more likely to be non-essential or not present in other taxa. These results are consistent with the notion that patterns of evolutionary conservation of essential genes are influenced by their compensability-that is, by how easily they can be functionally replaced, for example through increased expression of other genes.}, author = {Bergmiller, Tobias and Ackermann, Martin and Silander, Olin}, journal = {PLoS Genetics}, number = {6}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Patterns of evolutionary conservation of essential genes correlate with their compensability}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1002803}, volume = {8}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3136, abstract = {Continuous-time Markov chains (CTMC) with their rich theory and efficient simulation algorithms have been successfully used in modeling stochastic processes in diverse areas such as computer science, physics, and biology. However, systems that comprise non-instantaneous events cannot be accurately and efficiently modeled with CTMCs. In this paper we define delayed CTMCs, an extension of CTMCs that allows for the specification of a lower bound on the time interval between an event's initiation and its completion, and we propose an algorithm for the computation of their behavior. Our algorithm effectively decomposes the computation into two stages: a pure CTMC governs event initiations while a deterministic process guarantees lower bounds on event completion times. Furthermore, from the nature of delayed CTMCs, we obtain a parallelized version of our algorithm. We use our formalism to model genetic regulatory circuits (biological systems where delayed events are common) and report on the results of our numerical algorithm as run on a cluster. We compare performance and accuracy of our results with results obtained by using pure CTMCs. © 2012 Springer-Verlag.}, author = {Guet, Calin C and Gupta, Ashutosh and Henzinger, Thomas A and Mateescu, Maria and Sezgin, Ali}, location = {Berkeley, CA, USA}, pages = {294 -- 309}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Delayed continuous time Markov chains for genetic regulatory circuits}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-31424-7_24}, volume = {7358 }, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3135, abstract = {We introduce consumption games, a model for discrete interactive system with multiple resources that are consumed or reloaded independently. More precisely, a consumption game is a finite-state graph where each transition is labeled by a vector of resource updates, where every update is a non-positive number or ω. The ω updates model the reloading of a given resource. Each vertex belongs either to player □ or player ◇, where the aim of player □ is to play so that the resources are never exhausted. We consider several natural algorithmic problems about consumption games, and show that although these problems are computationally hard in general, they are solvable in polynomial time for every fixed number of resource types (i.e., the dimension of the update vectors) and bounded resource updates. }, author = {Brázdil, Brázdil and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Kučera, Antonín and Novotny, Petr}, location = {Berkeley, CA, USA}, pages = {23 -- 38}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Efficient controller synthesis for consumption games with multiple resource types}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-31424-7_8}, volume = {7358}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3133, abstract = {This note contributes to the point calculus of persistent homology by extending Alexander duality from spaces to real-valued functions. Given a perfect Morse function f: S n+1 →[0, 1 and a decomposition S n+1 = U ∪ V into two (n + 1)-manifolds with common boundary M, we prove elementary relationships between the persistence diagrams of f restricted to U, to V, and to M. }, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Kerber, Michael}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the twenty-eighth annual symposium on Computational geometry }, location = {Chapel Hill, NC, USA}, pages = {249 -- 258}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Alexander duality for functions: The persistent behavior of land and water and shore}}, doi = {10.1145/2261250.2261287}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3134, abstract = {It has been an open question whether the sum of finitely many isotropic Gaussian kernels in n ≥ 2 dimensions can have more modes than kernels, until in 2003 Carreira-Perpiñán and Williams exhibited n +1 isotropic Gaussian kernels in ℝ n with n + 2 modes. We give a detailed analysis of this example, showing that it has exponentially many critical points and that the resilience of the extra mode grows like √n. In addition, we exhibit finite configurations of isotropic Gaussian kernels with superlinearly many modes. }, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Fasy, Brittany and Rote, Günter}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the twenty-eighth annual symposium on Computational geometry }, location = {Chapel Hill, NC, USA}, pages = {91 -- 100}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Add isotropic Gaussian kernels at own risk: More and more resilient modes in higher dimensions}}, doi = {10.1145/2261250.2261265}, year = {2012}, } @article{3132, abstract = {Reproductive division of labour is a characteristic trait of social insects. The dominant reproductive individual, often the queen, uses chemical communication and/or behaviour to maintain her social status. Queens of many social insects communicate their fertility status via cuticle-bound substances. As these substances usually possess a low volatility, their range in queen–worker communication is potentially limited. Here, we investigate the range and impact of behavioural and chemical queen signals on workers of the ant Temnothorax longispinosus. We compared the behaviour and ovary development of workers subjected to three different treatments: workers with direct chemical and physical contact to the queen, those solely under the influence of volatile queen substances and those entirely separated from the queen. In addition to short-ranged queen signals preventing ovary development in workers, we discovered a novel secondary pathway influencing worker behaviour. Workers with no physical contact to the queen, but exposed to volatile substances, started to develop their ovaries, but did not change their behaviour compared to workers in direct contact to the queen. In contrast, workers in queen-separated groups showed both increased ovary development and aggressive dominance interactions. We conclude that T. longispinosus queens influence worker ovary development and behaviour via two independent signals, both ensuring social harmony within the colony.}, author = {Konrad, Matthias and Pamminger, Tobias and Foitzik, Susanne}, journal = {Naturwissenschaften}, number = {8}, pages = {627 -- 636}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Two pathways ensuring social harmony}}, doi = {10.1007/s00114-012-0943-z}, volume = {99}, year = {2012}, } @article{3161, abstract = {Some inflammatory stimuli trigger activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome by inducing efflux of cellular potassium. Loss of cellular potassium is known to potently suppress protein synthesis, leading us to test whether the inhibition of protein synthesis itself serves as an activating signal for the NLRP3 inflammasome. Murine bone marrow-derived macrophages, either primed by LPS or unprimed, were exposed to a panel of inhibitors of ribosomal function: ricin, cycloheximide, puromycin, pactamycin, and anisomycin. Macrophages were also exposed to nigericin, ATP, monosodium urate (MSU), and poly I:C. Synthesis of pro-IL-ß and release of IL-1ß from cells in response to these agents was detected by immunoblotting and ELISA. Release of intracellular potassium was measured by mass spectrometry. Inhibition of translation by each of the tested translation inhibitors led to processing of IL-1ß, which was released from cells. Processing and release of IL-1ß was reduced or absent from cells deficient in NLRP3, ASC, or caspase-1, demonstrating the role of the NLRP3 inflammasome. Despite the inability of these inhibitors to trigger efflux of intracellular potassium, the addition of high extracellular potassium suppressed activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome. MSU and double-stranded RNA, which are known to activate the NLRP3 inflammasome, also substantially inhibited protein translation, supporting a close association between inhibition of translation and inflammasome activation. These data demonstrate that translational inhibition itself constitutes a heretofore-unrecognized mechanism underlying IL-1ß dependent inflammatory signaling and that other physical, chemical, or pathogen-associated agents that impair translation may lead to IL-1ß-dependent inflammation through activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome. For agents that inhibit translation through decreased cellular potassium, the application of high extracellular potassium restores protein translation and suppresses activation of the NLRP inflammasome. For agents that inhibit translation through mechanisms that do not involve loss of potassium, high extracellular potassium suppresses IL-1ß processing through a mechanism that remains undefined.}, author = {Vyleta, Meghan and Wong, John and Magun, Bruce}, journal = {PLoS One}, number = {5}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Suppression of ribosomal function triggers innate immune signaling through activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0036044}, volume = {7}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3162, abstract = {Given a dense-time real-valued signal and a parameterized temporal logic formula with both magnitude and timing parameters, we compute the subset of the parameter space that renders the formula satisfied by the trace. We provide two preliminary implementations, one which follows the exact semantics and attempts to compute the validity domain by quantifier elimination in linear arithmetics and one which conducts adaptive search in the parameter space.}, author = {Asarin, Eugene and Donzé, Alexandre and Maler, Oded and Nickovic, Dejan}, location = {San Francisco, CA, United States}, pages = {147 -- 160}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Parametric identification of temporal properties}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-29860-8_12}, volume = {7186}, year = {2012}, } @article{3160, abstract = {There is a long-running controversy about how early cell fate decisions are made in the developing mammalian embryo. 1,2 In particular, it is controversial when the first events that can predict the establishment of the pluripotent and extra-embryonic lineages in the blastocyst of the pre-implantation embryo occur. It has long been proposed that the position and polarity of cells at the 16- to 32-cell stage embryo influence their decision to either give rise to the pluripotent cell lineage that eventually contributes to the inner cell mass (ICM), comprising the primitive endoderm (PE) and the epiblast (EPI), or the extra-embryonic trophectoderm (TE) surrounding the blastocoel. The positioning of cells in the embryo at this developmental stage could largely be the result of random events, making this a stochastic model of cell lineage allocation. Contrary to such a stochastic model, some studies have detected putative differences in the lineage potential of individual blastomeres before compaction, indicating that the first cell fate decisions may occur as early as at the 4-cell stage. Using a non-invasive, quantitative in vivo imaging assay to study the kinetic behavior of Oct4 (also known as POU5F1), a key transcription factor (TF) controlling pre-implantation development in the mouse embryo, 3-5 a recent study identifies Oct4 kinetics as a predictive measure of cell lineage patterning in the early mouse embryo. 6 Here, we discuss the implications of such molecular heterogeneities in early development and offer potential avenues toward a mechanistic understanding of these observations, contributing to the resolution of the controversy of developmental cell lineage allocation.}, author = {Pantazis, Periklis and Bollenbach, Tobias}, journal = {Cell Cycle}, number = {11}, pages = {2055 -- 2058}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, title = {{Transcription factor kinetics and the emerging asymmetry in the early mammalian embryo}}, doi = {10.4161/cc.20118}, volume = {11}, year = {2012}, } @article{3164, abstract = {Overview of the Special Issue on structured prediction and inference.}, author = {Blaschko, Matthew and Lampert, Christoph}, journal = {International Journal of Computer Vision}, number = {3}, pages = {257 -- 258}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Guest editorial: Special issue on structured prediction and inference}}, doi = {10.1007/s11263-012-0530-y}, volume = {99}, year = {2012}, } @article{3166, abstract = {There is evidence that the genetic code was established prior to the existence of proteins, when metabolism was powered by ribozymes. Also, early proto-organisms had to rely on simple anaerobic bioenergetic processes. In this work I propose that amino acid fermentation powered metabolism in the RNA world, and that this was facilitated by proto-adapters, the precursors of the tRNAs. Amino acids were used as carbon sources rather than as catalytic or structural elements. In modern bacteria, amino acid fermentation is known as the Stickland reaction. This pathway involves two amino acids: the first undergoes oxidative deamination, and the second acts as an electron acceptor through reductive deamination. This redox reaction results in two keto acids that are employed to synthesise ATP via substrate-level phosphorylation. The Stickland reaction is the basic bioenergetic pathway of some bacteria of the genus Clostridium. Two other facts support Stickland fermentation in the RNA world. First, several Stickland amino acid pairs are synthesised in abiotic amino acid synthesis. This suggests that amino acids that could be used as an energy substrate were freely available. Second, anticodons that have complementary sequences often correspond to amino acids that form Stickland pairs. The main hypothesis of this paper is that pairs of complementary proto-adapters were assigned to Stickland amino acids pairs. There are signatures of this hypothesis in the genetic code. Furthermore, it is argued that the proto-adapters formed double strands that brought amino acid pairs into proximity to facilitate their mutual redox reaction, structurally constraining the anticodon pairs that are assigned to these amino acid pairs. Significance tests which randomise the code are performed to study the extent of the variability of the energetic (ATP) yield. Random assignments can lead to a substantial yield of ATP and maintain enough variability, thus selection can act and refine the assignments into a proto-code that optimises the energetic yield. Monte Carlo simulations are performed to evaluate the establishment of these simple proto-codes, based on amino acid substitutions and codon swapping. In all cases, donor amino acids are assigned to anticodons composed of U+G, and have low redundancy (1-2 codons), whereas acceptor amino acids are assigned to the the remaining codons. These bioenergetic and structural constraints allow for a metabolic role for amino acids before their co-option as catalyst cofactors. Reviewers: this article was reviewed by Prof. William Martin, Prof. Eors Szathmary (nominated by Dr. Gaspar Jekely) and Dr. Adam Kun (nominated by Dr. Sandor Pongor)}, author = {Vladar, Harold}, journal = {Biology Direct}, publisher = {BioMed Central}, title = {{Amino acid fermentation at the origin of the genetic code}}, doi = {10.1186/1745-6150-7-6}, volume = {7}, year = {2012}, } @article{3167, author = {Weber, Michele}, journal = {Science}, number = {6077}, pages = {32--34}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{NextGen speaks 13 }}, doi = {10.1126/science.336.6077.32}, volume = {336}, year = {2012}, } @article{3241, abstract = {We prove a negative result concerning error reduction by parallel repetition for computationally sound protocols, e.g., interactive arguments. Our main result is a complete and computationally sound eight round interactive argument for which k-fold parallel repetition does not reduce the error below a constant for any polynomial k. The starting point for our construction is the work of Bellare, Impagliazzo and Naor (FOCS'97). For any fixed k, they construct a four round protocol for which k-fold parallel repetition does not lower the soundness error. The communication complexity of this protocol is linear in k. By using universal arguments due to Barak and Goldreich (CCC 2002), we turn this protocol into an eight-round protocol whose complexity is basically independent of k. }, author = {Krzysztof Pietrzak and Wikström, Douglas}, journal = {Journal of Cryptology}, number = {1}, pages = {116 -- 135}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Parallel repetition of computationally sound protocols revisited}}, doi = {10.1007/s00145-010-9090-x}, volume = {25}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3252, abstract = {We study the automatic synthesis of fair non-repudiation protocols, a class of fair exchange protocols, used for digital contract signing. First, we show how to specify the objectives of the participating agents, the trusted third party (TTP) and the protocols as path formulas in Linear Temporal Logic (LTL) and prove that the satisfaction of the objectives of the agents and the TTP imply satisfaction of the protocol objectives. We then show that weak (co-operative) co-synthesis and classical (strictly competitive) co-synthesis fail in synthesizing these protocols, whereas assume-guarantee synthesis (AGS) succeeds. We demonstrate the success of assume-guarantee synthesis as follows: (a) any solution of assume-guarantee synthesis is attack-free; no subset of participants can violate the objectives of the other participants without violating their own objectives; (b) the Asokan-Shoup-Waidner (ASW) certified mail protocol that has known vulnerabilities is not a solution of AGS; and (c) the Kremer-Markowitch (KM) non-repudiation protocol is a solution of AGS. To our knowledge this is the first application of synthesis to fair non-repudiation protocols, and our results show how synthesis can generate correct protocols and automatically discover vulnerabilities. The solution to assume-guarantee synthesis can be computed efficiently as the secure equilibrium solution of three-player graph games. © 2012 Springer-Verlag.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Raman, Vishwanath}, location = {Philadelphia, PA, USA}, pages = {152 -- 168}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Synthesizing protocols for digital contract signing}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-27940-9_11}, volume = {7148}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3255, abstract = {In this paper we survey results of two-player games on graphs and Markov decision processes with parity, mean-payoff and energy objectives, and the combination of mean-payoff and energy objectives with parity objectives. These problems have applications in verification and synthesis of reactive systems in resource-constrained environments.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Doyen, Laurent}, location = {Lednice, Czech Republic}, pages = {37 -- 46}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Games and Markov decision processes with mean payoff parity and energy parity objectives}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-25929-6_3}, volume = {7119}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3250, abstract = {The Learning Parity with Noise (LPN) problem has recently found many applications in cryptography as the hardness assumption underlying the constructions of "provably secure" cryptographic schemes like encryption or authentication protocols. Being provably secure means that the scheme comes with a proof showing that the existence of an efficient adversary against the scheme implies that the underlying hardness assumption is wrong. LPN based schemes are appealing for theoretical and practical reasons. On the theoretical side, LPN based schemes offer a very strong security guarantee. The LPN problem is equivalent to the problem of decoding random linear codes, a problem that has been extensively studied in the last half century. The fastest known algorithms run in exponential time and unlike most number-theoretic problems used in cryptography, the LPN problem does not succumb to known quantum algorithms. On the practical side, LPN based schemes are often extremely simple and efficient in terms of code-size as well as time and space requirements. This makes them prime candidates for light-weight devices like RFID tags, which are too weak to implement standard cryptographic primitives like the AES block-cipher. This talk will be a gentle introduction to provable security using simple LPN based schemes as examples. Starting from pseudorandom generators and symmetric key encryption, over secret-key authentication protocols, and, if time admits, touching on recent constructions of public-key identification, commitments and zero-knowledge proofs.}, author = {Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z}, location = {Špindlerův Mlýn, Czech Republic}, pages = {99 -- 114}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Cryptography from learning parity with noise}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-27660-6_9}, volume = {7147}, year = {2012}, } @article{3256, abstract = {We use a distortion to define the dual complex of a cubical subdivision of ℝ n as an n-dimensional subcomplex of the nerve of the set of n-cubes. Motivated by the topological analysis of high-dimensional digital image data, we consider such subdivisions defined by generalizations of quad- and oct-trees to n dimensions. Assuming the subdivision is balanced, we show that mapping each vertex to the center of the corresponding n-cube gives a geometric realization of the dual complex in ℝ n.}, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Kerber, Michael}, journal = {Discrete & Computational Geometry}, number = {2}, pages = {393 -- 414}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Dual complexes of cubical subdivisions of ℝn}}, doi = {10.1007/s00454-011-9382-4}, volume = {47}, year = {2012}, } @article{3254, abstract = {The theory of graph games with ω-regular winning conditions is the foundation for modeling and synthesizing reactive processes. In the case of stochastic reactive processes, the corresponding stochastic graph games have three players, two of them (System and Environment) behaving adversarially, and the third (Uncertainty) behaving probabilistically. We consider two problems for stochastic graph games: the qualitative problem asks for the set of states from which a player can win with probability 1 (almost-sure winning); and the quantitative problem asks for the maximal probability of winning (optimal winning) from each state. We consider ω-regular winning conditions formalized as Müller winning conditions. We present optimal memory bounds for pure (deterministic) almost-sure winning and optimal winning strategies in stochastic graph games with Müller winning conditions. We also study the complexity of stochastic Müller games and show that both the qualitative and quantitative analysis problems are PSPACE-complete. Our results are relevant in synthesis of stochastic reactive processes.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu}, journal = {Information and Computation}, pages = {29 -- 48}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{The complexity of stochastic Müller games}}, doi = {10.1016/j.ic.2011.11.004}, volume = {211}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3253, abstract = {We describe a framework for reasoning about programs with lists carrying integer numerical data. We use abstract domains to describe and manipulate complex constraints on configurations of these programs mixing constraints on the shape of the heap, sizes of the lists, on the multisets of data stored in these lists, and on the data at their different positions. Moreover, we provide powerful techniques for automatic validation of Hoare-triples and invariant checking, as well as for automatic synthesis of invariants and procedure summaries using modular inter-procedural analysis. The approach has been implemented in a tool called Celia and experimented successfully on a large benchmark of programs.}, author = {Bouajjani, Ahmed and Dragoi, Cezara and Enea, Constantin and Sighireanu, Mihaela}, location = {Philadelphia, PA, USA}, pages = {1 -- 22}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Abstract domains for automated reasoning about list manipulating programs with infinite data}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-27940-9_1}, volume = {7148}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3265, abstract = {We propose a mid-level statistical model for image segmentation that composes multiple figure-ground hypotheses (FG) obtained by applying constraints at different locations and scales, into larger interpretations (tilings) of the entire image. Inference is cast as optimization over sets of maximal cliques sampled from a graph connecting all non-overlapping figure-ground segment hypotheses. Potential functions over cliques combine unary, Gestalt-based figure qualities, and pairwise compatibilities among spatially neighboring segments, constrained by T-junctions and the boundary interface statistics of real scenes. Learning the model parameters is based on maximum likelihood, alternating between sampling image tilings and optimizing their potential function parameters. State of the art results are reported on the Berkeley and Stanford segmentation datasets, as well as VOC2009, where a 28% improvement was achieved.}, author = {Ion, Adrian and Carreira, Joao and Sminchisescu, Cristian}, location = {Barcelona, Spain}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{Image segmentation by figure-ground composition into maximal cliques}}, doi = {10.1109/ICCV.2011.6126486}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3282, abstract = {Traditionally, symmetric-key message authentication codes (MACs) are easily built from pseudorandom functions (PRFs). In this work we propose a wide variety of other approaches to building efficient MACs, without going through a PRF first. In particular, unlike deterministic PRF-based MACs, where each message has a unique valid tag, we give a number of probabilistic MAC constructions from various other primitives/assumptions. Our main results are summarized as follows: We show several new probabilistic MAC constructions from a variety of general assumptions, including CCA-secure encryption, Hash Proof Systems and key-homomorphic weak PRFs. By instantiating these frameworks under concrete number theoretic assumptions, we get several schemes which are more efficient than just using a state-of-the-art PRF instantiation under the corresponding assumption. For probabilistic MACs, unlike deterministic ones, unforgeability against a chosen message attack (uf-cma ) alone does not imply security if the adversary can additionally make verification queries (uf-cmva ). We give an efficient generic transformation from any uf-cma secure MAC which is "message-hiding" into a uf-cmva secure MAC. This resolves the main open problem of Kiltz et al. from Eurocrypt'11; By using our transformation on their constructions, we get the first efficient MACs from the LPN assumption. While all our new MAC constructions immediately give efficient actively secure, two-round symmetric-key identification schemes, we also show a very simple, three-round actively secure identification protocol from any weak PRF. In particular, the resulting protocol is much more efficient than the trivial approach of building a regular PRF from a weak PRF. © 2012 International Association for Cryptologic Research.}, author = {Dodis, Yevgeniy and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z and Kiltz, Eike and Wichs, Daniel}, location = {Cambridge, UK}, pages = {355 -- 374}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Message authentication, revisited}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-29011-4_22}, volume = {7237}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3280, abstract = {The (decisional) learning with errors problem (LWE) asks to distinguish "noisy" inner products of a secret vector with random vectors from uniform. The learning parities with noise problem (LPN) is the special case where the elements of the vectors are bits. In recent years, the LWE and LPN problems have found many applications in cryptography. In this paper we introduce a (seemingly) much stronger adaptive assumption, called "subspace LWE" (SLWE), where the adversary can learn the inner product of the secret and random vectors after they were projected into an adaptively and adversarially chosen subspace. We prove that, surprisingly, the SLWE problem mapping into subspaces of dimension d is almost as hard as LWE using secrets of length d (the other direction is trivial.) This result immediately implies that several existing cryptosystems whose security is based on the hardness of the LWE/LPN problems are provably secure in a much stronger sense than anticipated. As an illustrative example we show that the standard way of using LPN for symmetric CPA secure encryption is even secure against a very powerful class of related key attacks. }, author = {Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z}, location = {Taormina, Sicily, Italy}, pages = {548 -- 563}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Subspace LWE}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-28914-9_31}, volume = {7194}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3281, abstract = {We consider the problem of amplifying the "lossiness" of functions. We say that an oracle circuit C*: {0,1} m → {0,1}* amplifies relative lossiness from ℓ/n to L/m if for every function f:{0,1} n → {0,1} n it holds that 1 If f is injective then so is C f. 2 If f has image size of at most 2 n-ℓ, then C f has image size at most 2 m-L. The question is whether such C* exists for L/m ≫ ℓ/n. This problem arises naturally in the context of cryptographic "lossy functions," where the relative lossiness is the key parameter. We show that for every circuit C* that makes at most t queries to f, the relative lossiness of C f is at most L/m ≤ ℓ/n + O(log t)/n. In particular, no black-box method making a polynomial t = poly(n) number of queries can amplify relative lossiness by more than an O(logn)/n additive term. We show that this is tight by giving a simple construction (cascading with some randomization) that achieves such amplification.}, author = {Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z and Rosen, Alon and Segev, Gil}, location = {Taormina, Sicily, Italy}, pages = {458 -- 475}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Lossy functions do not amplify well}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-28914-9_26}, volume = {7194}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{3284, abstract = {We study the complexity of valued constraint satisfaction problems (VCSP). A problem from VCSP is characterised by a constraint language, a fixed set of cost functions over a finite domain. An instance of the problem is specified by a sum of cost functions from the language and the goal is to minimise the sum. Under the unique games conjecture, the approximability of finite-valued VCSPs is well-understood, see Raghavendra [FOCS’08]. However, there is no characterisation of finite-valued VCSPs, let alone general-valued VCSPs, that can be solved exactly in polynomial time, thus giving insights from a combinatorial optimisation perspective. We consider the case of languages containing all possible unary cost functions. In the case of languages consisting of only {0, ∞}-valued cost functions (i.e. relations), such languages have been called conservative and studied by Bulatov [LICS’03] and recently by Barto [LICS’11]. Since we study valued languages, we call a language conservative if it contains all finite-valued unary cost functions. The computational complexity of conservative valued languages has been studied by Cohen et al. [AIJ’06] for languages over Boolean domains, by Deineko et al. [JACM’08] for {0,1}-valued languages (a.k.a Max-CSP), and by Takhanov [STACS’10] for {0,∞}-valued languages containing all finite- valued unary cost functions (a.k.a. Min-Cost-Hom). We prove a Schaefer-like dichotomy theorem for conservative valued languages: if all cost functions in the language satisfy a certain condition (specified by a complementary combination of STP and MJN multimorphisms), then any instance can be solved in polynomial time (via a new algorithm developed in this paper), otherwise the language is NP-hard. This is the first complete complexity classification of general-valued constraint languages over non-Boolean domains. It is a common phenomenon that complexity classifications of problems over non-Boolean domains is significantly harder than the Boolean case. The polynomial-time algorithm we present for the tractable cases is a generalisation of the submodular minimisation problem and a result of Cohen et al. [TCS’08]. Our results generalise previous results by Takhanov [STACS’10] and (a subset of results) by Cohen et al. [AIJ’06] and Deineko et al. [JACM’08]. Moreover, our results do not rely on any computer-assisted search as in Deineko et al. [JACM’08], and provide a powerful tool for proving hardness of finite-valued and general-valued languages.}, author = {Vladimir Kolmogorov and Živný, Stanislav}, pages = {750 -- 759}, publisher = {SIAM}, title = {{The complexity of conservative valued CSPs}}, year = {2012}, } @article{330, abstract = {A procedure for the continuous production of Cu 2ZnSnS 4 (CZTS) nanoparticles with controlled composition is presented. CZTS nanoparticles were prepared through the reaction of the metals' amino complexes with elemental sulfur in a continuous-flow reactor at moderate temperatures (300-330 °C). High-resolution transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis showed the nanocrystals to have a crystallographic structure compatible with that of the kesterite. Chemical characterization of the materials showed the presence of the four elements in each individual nanocrystal. Composition control was achieved by adjusting the solution flow rate through the reactor and the proper choice of the nominal precursor concentration within the flowing solution. Single-particle analysis revealed a composition distribution within each sample, which was optimized at the highest synthesis temperatures used. }, author = {Shavel, Alexey and Cadavid, Doris and Ibáñez, Maria and Carrete, Alex and Cabot, Andreu}, journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, number = {3}, pages = {1438 -- 1441}, publisher = {ACS}, title = {{Continuous production of Cu inf 2 inf ZnSnS inf 4 inf nanocrystals in a flow reactor}}, doi = {10.1021/ja209688a}, volume = {134}, year = {2012}, } @article{3317, abstract = {The physical distance between presynaptic Ca2+ channels and the Ca2+ sensors that trigger exocytosis of neurotransmitter-containing vesicles is a key determinant of the signalling properties of synapses in the nervous system. Recent functional analysis indicates that in some fast central synapses, transmitter release is triggered by a small number of Ca2+ channels that are coupled to Ca2+ sensors at the nanometre scale. Molecular analysis suggests that this tight coupling is generated by protein–protein interactions involving Ca2+ channels, Ca2+ sensors and various other synaptic proteins. Nanodomain coupling has several functional advantages, as it increases the efficacy, speed and energy efficiency of synaptic transmission.}, author = {Eggermann, Emmanuel and Bucurenciu, Iancu and Goswami, Sarit and Jonas, Peter M}, journal = {Nature Reviews Neuroscience}, number = {1}, pages = {7 -- 21}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Nanodomain coupling between Ca(2+) channels and sensors of exocytosis at fast mammalian synapses}}, doi = {10.1038/nrn3125}, volume = {13}, year = {2012}, } @article{3314, abstract = {We introduce two-level discounted and mean-payoff games played by two players on a perfect-information stochastic game graph. The upper level game is a discounted or mean-payoff game and the lower level game is a (undiscounted) reachability game. Two-level games model hierarchical and sequential decision making under uncertainty across different time scales. For both discounted and mean-payoff two-level games, we show the existence of pure memoryless optimal strategies for both players and an ordered field property. We show that if there is only one player (Markov decision processes), then the values can be computed in polynomial time. It follows that whether the value of a player is equal to a given rational constant in two-level discounted or mean-payoff games can be decided in NP ∩ coNP. We also give an alternate strategy improvement algorithm to compute the value. © 2012 World Scientific Publishing Company.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Majumdar, Ritankar}, journal = {International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science}, number = {3}, pages = {609 -- 625}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing}, title = {{Discounting and averaging in games across time scales}}, doi = {10.1142/S0129054112400308}, volume = {23}, year = {2012}, } @article{3115, abstract = {We consider the offset-deconstruction problem: Given a polygonal shape Q with n vertices, can it be expressed, up to a tolerance ε in Hausdorff distance, as the Minkowski sum of another polygonal shape P with a disk of fixed radius? If it does, we also seek a preferably simple-looking solution P; then, P's offset constitutes an accurate, vertex-reduced, and smoothened approximation of Q. We give an O(nlogn)-time exact decision algorithm that handles any polygonal shape, assuming the real-RAM model of computation. A variant of the algorithm, which we have implemented using the cgal library, is based on rational arithmetic and answers the same deconstruction problem up to an uncertainty parameter δ its running time additionally depends on δ. If the input shape is found to be approximable, this algorithm also computes an approximate solution for the problem. It also allows us to solve parameter-optimization problems induced by the offset-deconstruction problem. For convex shapes, the complexity of the exact decision algorithm drops to O(n), which is also the time required to compute a solution P with at most one more vertex than a vertex-minimal one.}, author = {Berberich, Eric and Halperin, Dan and Kerber, Michael and Pogalnikova, Roza}, journal = {Discrete & Computational Geometry}, number = {4}, pages = {964 -- 989}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Deconstructing approximate offsets}}, doi = {10.1007/s00454-012-9441-5}, volume = {48}, year = {2012}, } @article{3331, abstract = {Computing the topology of an algebraic plane curve C means computing a combinatorial graph that is isotopic to C and thus represents its topology in R2. We prove that, for a polynomial of degree n with integer coefficients bounded by 2ρ, the topology of the induced curve can be computed with bit operations ( indicates that we omit logarithmic factors). Our analysis improves the previous best known complexity bounds by a factor of n2. The improvement is based on new techniques to compute and refine isolating intervals for the real roots of polynomials, and on the consequent amortized analysis of the critical fibers of the algebraic curve.}, author = {Kerber, Michael and Sagraloff, Michael}, journal = { Journal of Symbolic Computation}, number = {3}, pages = {239 -- 258}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A worst case bound for topology computation of algebraic curves}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jsc.2011.11.001}, volume = {47}, year = {2012}, } @article{346, abstract = {Arrays of vertically aligned ZnO : Cl/TiO2 and ZnO : Cl/ZnxTiOy/TiO2 core–shell nanowires (NWs) were prepared by means of the combination of two solution-growth processes. First, single-crystal ZnO NWs with controlled n-type doping were grown on conducting substrates by a low-cost, high-yield and seed-free electrochemical route. These NWs were covered by a titanium oxide shell of tunable thickness mediating successive adsorption-hydrolysis-condensation steps. Using this atomic-layer growth procedure, titania shells with controlled thickness and the anatase TiO2 phase were obtained after sintering at 450 °C. Higher sintering temperatures resulted in the formation of ZnO : Cl/ZnxTiOy/TiO2 core–shell NWs by the interdiffusion of Zn and Ti ions at the ZnO–TiO2 interface. The performance of ZnO : Cl/TiO2 and ZnO : Cl/ZnxTiOy/TiO2 core–shell NWs towards photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting was investigated as a function of the titania shell thickness. Furthermore, the performance of such core–shell NWs as photoelectrodes in dye-sensitized solar cells was also characterized. The TiO2 presence at the ZnO : Cl surface promoted a two-fold increase on the produced photocurrent densities, probing their potential for PEC and optoelectronic applications. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy was used to corroborate the lower resistance for charge transfer between the NWs and the electrolyte in the presence of the TiO2 shell.}, author = {Fan, Jiandong and Zamani, Reza and Fábrega, Cristina and Shavel, Alexey and Flox, Cristina and Ibáñez, Maria and Andreu, Teresa and López, Amtonio and Arbiol, Jordi and Morante, Joan and Cabot, Andreu}, journal = {Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics}, number = {41}, publisher = {IOP Publishing Ltd.}, title = {{Solution-growth and optoelectronic performance of ZnO : Cl/TiO2 and ZnO : Cl/ZnxTiOy/TiO2 core–shell nanowires with tunable shell thickness}}, doi = {10.1088/0022-3727/45/41/415301}, volume = {45}, year = {2012}, } @article{3168, abstract = {The induction of a signaling pathway is characterized by transient complex formation and mutual posttranslational modification of proteins. To faithfully capture this combinatorial process in a mathematical model is an important challenge in systems biology. Exploiting the limited context on which most binding and modification events are conditioned, attempts have been made to reduce the combinatorial complexity by quotienting the reachable set of molecular species into species aggregates while preserving the deterministic semantics of the thermodynamic limit. Recently, we proposed a quotienting that also preserves the stochastic semantics and that is complete in the sense that the semantics of individual species can be recovered from the aggregate semantics. In this paper, we prove that this quotienting yields a sufficient condition for weak lumpability (that is to say that the quotient system is still Markovian for a given set of initial distributions) and that it gives rise to a backward Markov bisimulation between the original and aggregated transition system (which means that the conditional probability of being in a given state in the original system knowing that we are in its equivalence class is an invariant of the system). We illustrate the framework on a case study of the epidermal growth factor (EGF)/insulin receptor crosstalk.}, author = {Feret, Jérôme and Henzinger, Thomas A and Koeppl, Heinz and Petrov, Tatjana}, journal = {Theoretical Computer Science}, pages = {137 -- 164}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Lumpability abstractions of rule based systems}}, doi = {10.1016/j.tcs.2011.12.059}, volume = {431}, year = {2012}, } @article{377, abstract = {The potential to control the composition and crystal phase at the nanometer scale enable the production of nanocrystalline materials with enhanced functionalities and new applications. In the present work, we detail a novel colloidal synthesis route to prepare nanoparticles of the ternary semiconductor Cu2GeSe3 (CGSe) with nanometer-scale control over their crystal phases. We also demonstrate the structural effect on the thermoelectric properties of bottom-up-prepared CGSe nanomaterials. By careful adjustment of the nucleation and growth temperatures, pure orthorhombic CGSe nanoparticles with cationic order or polytypic CGSe nanoparticles with disordered cation positions can be produced. In this second type of nanoparticle, a high density of twins can be created to periodically change the atomic plane stacking, forming a hexagonal wurtzite CGSe phase. The high yield of the synthetic routes reported here allows the production of single-phase and multiphase CGSe nanoparticles in the gram scale, which permits characterization of the thermoelectric properties of these materials. Reduced thermal conductivities and a related 2.5-fold increase of the thermoelectric figure of merit for multiphase nanomaterials compared to pure-phase CGSe are systematically obtained. These results are discussed in terms of the density and efficiency of phonon scattering centers in both types of materials.}, author = {Ibáñez, Maria and Zamani, Reza and Li, Wenhua and Cadavid, Doris and Gorse, Stéphane and Katchoi, Nebll and Shavel, Alexey and López, Antonioo and Morante, Joan and Arbiol, Jordi and Cabot, Andreu}, journal = {Chemistry of Materials}, number = {23}, pages = {4615 -- 4622}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, title = {{Crystallographic control at the nanoscale to enhance functionality: Polytypic Cu2GeSe3 nanoparticles as thermoelectric materials}}, doi = {10.1021/cm303252q}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @article{3846, abstract = {We summarize classical and recent results about two-player games played on graphs with ω-regular objectives. These games have applications in the verification and synthesis of reactive systems. Important distinctions are whether a graph game is turn-based or concurrent; deterministic or stochastic; zero-sum or not. We cluster known results and open problems according to these classifications.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Henzinger, Thomas A}, journal = {Journal of Computer and System Sciences}, number = {2}, pages = {394 -- 413}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A survey of stochastic ω regular games}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jcss.2011.05.002}, volume = {78}, year = {2012}, } @article{387, abstract = {In this Letter we present detailed study of the density of states near defects in Bi 2Se 3. In particular, we present data on the commonly found triangular defects in this system. While we do not find any measurable quasiparticle scattering interference effects, we do find localized resonances, which can be well fitted by theory once the potential is taken to be extended to properly account for the observed defects. The data together with the fits confirm that while the local density of states around the Dirac point of the electronic spectrum at the surface is significantly disrupted near the impurity by the creation of low-energy resonance state, the Dirac point is not locally destroyed. We discuss our results in terms of the expected protected surface state of topological insulators. © 2012 American Physical Society.}, author = {Alpichshev, Zhanybek and Biswas, Rudro and Balatsky, Alexander and Analytis, James and Chu, Jiunhaw and Fisher, Ian and Kapitulnik, Aharon}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {20}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{STM imaging of impurity resonances on Bi 2Se 3}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.206402}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @article{3110, abstract = {The directional transport of the phytohormone auxin depends on the phosphorylation status and polar localization of PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin efflux proteins. While PINIOD (PID) kinase is directly involved in the phosphorylation of PIN proteins, the phosphatase holoenzyme complexes that dephosphorylate PIN proteins remain elusive. Here, we demonstrate that mutations simultaneously disrupting the function of Arabidopsis thaliana FyPP1 (for Phytochrome-associated serine/threonine protein phosphatase1) and FyPP3, two homologous genes encoding the catalytic subunits of protein phosphatase6 (PP6), cause elevated accumulation of phosphorylated PIN proteins, correlating with a basal-to-apical shift in subcellular PIN localization. The changes in PIN polarity result in increased root basipetal auxin transport and severe defects, including shorter roots, fewer lateral roots, defective columella cells, root meristem collapse, abnormal cotyledons (small, cup-shaped, or fused cotyledons), and altered leaf venation. Our molecular, biochemical, and genetic data support the notion that FyPP1/3, SAL (for SAPS DOMAIN-LIKE), and PP2AA proteins (RCN1 [for ROOTS CURL IN NAPHTHYLPHTHALAMIC ACID1] or PP2AA1, PP2AA2, and PP2AA3) physically interact to form a novel PP6-type heterotrimeric holoenzyme complex. We also show that FyPP1/3, SAL, and PP2AA interact with a subset of PIN proteins and that for SAL the strength of the interaction depends on the PIN phosphorylation status. Thus, an Arabidopsis PP6-type phosphatase holoenzyme acts antagonistically with PID to direct auxin transport polarity and plant development by directly regulating PIN phosphorylation. }, author = {Dai, Mingqiu and Zhang, Chen and Urszula Kania and Chen, Fang and Xue, Qin and McCray, Tyra and Li, Gang and Qin, Genji and Wakeley, Michelle and Terzaghi, William and Wan, Jianmin and Zhao, Yunde and Xu, Jian and Jirí Friml and Deng, Xing W and Wang, Haiyang}, journal = {Plant Cell}, number = {6}, pages = {2497 -- 2514}, publisher = {American Society of Plant Biologists}, title = {{A PP6 type phosphatase holoenzyme directly regulates PIN phosphorylation and auxin efflux in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1105/tpc.112.098905}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, }