TY - JOUR AB - We build upon the recent papers by Weinstein and Yu (FOCS'16), Larsen (FOCS'12), and Clifford et al. (FOCS'15) to present a general framework that gives amortized lower bounds on the update and query times of dynamic data structures. Using our framework, we present two concrete results. (1) For the dynamic polynomial evaluation problem, where the polynomial is defined over a finite field of size n1+Ω(1) and has degree n, any dynamic data structure must either have an amortized update time of Ω((lgn/lglgn)2) or an amortized query time of Ω((lgn/lglgn)2). (2) For the dynamic online matrix vector multiplication problem, where we get an n×n matrix whose entires are drawn from a finite field of size nΘ(1), any dynamic data structure must either have an amortized update time of Ω((lgn/lglgn)2) or an amortized query time of Ω(n⋅(lgn/lglgn)2). For these two problems, the previous works by Larsen (FOCS'12) and Clifford et al. (FOCS'15) gave the same lower bounds, but only for worst case update and query times. Our bounds match the highest unconditional lower bounds known till date for any dynamic problem in the cell-probe model. AU - Bhattacharya, Sayan AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Neumann, Stefan ID - 11898 JF - Theoretical Computer Science SN - 0304-3975 TI - New amortized cell-probe lower bounds for dynamic problems VL - 779 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cross-coupling reactions mediated by dual nickel/photocatalysis are synthetically attractive but rely mainly on expensive, non-recyclable noble-metal complexes as photocatalysts. Heterogeneous semiconductors, which are commonly used for artificial photosynthesis and wastewater treatment, are a sustainable alternative. Graphitic carbon nitrides, a class of metal-free polymers that can be easily prepared from bulk chemicals, are heterogeneous semiconductors with high potential for photocatalytic organic transformations. Here, we demonstrate that graphitic carbon nitrides in combination with nickel catalysis can induce selective C−O cross-couplings of carboxylic acids with aryl halides, yielding the respective aryl esters in excellent yield and selectivity. The heterogeneous organic photocatalyst exhibits a broad substrate scope, is able to harvest green light, and can be recycled multiple times. In situ FTIR was used to track the reaction progress to study this transformation at different irradiation wavelengths and reaction scales. AU - Pieber, Bartholomäus AU - Malik, Jamal A. AU - Cavedon, Cristian AU - Gisbertz, Sebastian AU - Savateev, Aleksandr AU - Cruz, Daniel AU - Heil, Tobias AU - Zhang, Guigang AU - Seeberger, Peter H. ID - 11957 IS - 28 JF - Angewandte Chemie International Edition SN - 1433-7851 TI - Semi‐heterogeneous dual nickel/photocatalysis using carbon nitrides: Esterification of carboxylic acids with aryl halides VL - 58 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Differentially protected galactosamine building blocks are key components for the synthesis of human and bacterial oligosaccharides. The azidophenylselenylation of 3,4,6-tri-O-acetyl-d-galactal provides straightforward access to the corresponding 2-nitrogenated glycoside. Poor reproducibility and the use of azides that lead to the formation of potentially explosive and toxic species limit the scalability of this reaction and render it a bottleneck for carbohydrate synthesis. Here, we present a method for the safe, efficient, and reliable azidophenylselenylation of 3,4,6-tri-O-acetyl-d-galactal at room temperature, using continuous flow chemistry. Careful analysis of the transformation resulted in reaction conditions that produce minimal side products while the reaction time was reduced drastically when compared to batch reactions. The flow setup is readily scalable to process 5 mmol of galactal in 3 h, producing 1.2 mmol/h of product. AU - Guberman, Mónica AU - Pieber, Bartholomäus AU - Seeberger, Peter H. ID - 11984 IS - 12 JF - Organic Process Research and Development SN - 1083-6160 TI - Safe and scalable continuous flow azidophenylselenylation of galactal to prepare galactosamine building blocks VL - 23 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A carbon nitride material can be combined with homogeneous nickel catalysts for light-mediated cross-couplings of aryl bromides with alcohols under mild conditions. The metal-free heterogeneous semiconductor is fully recyclable and couples a broad range of electron-poor aryl bromides with primary and secondary alcohols as well as water. The application for intramolecular reactions and the synthesis of active pharmaceutical ingredients was demonstrated. The catalytic protocol is applicable for the coupling of aryl iodides with thiols as well. AU - Cavedon, Cristian AU - Madani, Amiera AU - Seeberger, Peter H. AU - Pieber, Bartholomäus ID - 11982 IS - 13 JF - Organic Letters SN - 1523-7060 TI - Semiheterogeneous dual nickel/photocatalytic (thio)etherification using carbon nitrides VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Upper and lower bounds, of the expected order of magnitude, are obtained for the number of rational points of bounded height on any quartic del Pezzo surface over ℚ that contains a conic defined over ℚ . AU - Browning, Timothy D AU - Sofos, Efthymios ID - 170 IS - 3-4 JF - Mathematische Annalen TI - Counting rational points on quartic del Pezzo surfaces with a rational conic VL - 373 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kalinin, Nikita AU - Shkolnikov, Mikhail ID - 441 IS - 3 JF - European Journal of Mathematics SN - 2199-675X TI - Tropical formulae for summation over a part of SL(2,Z) VL - 5 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The transcription coactivator, Yes-associated protein (YAP), which is a nuclear effector of the Hippo signaling pathway, has been shown to be a mechano-transducer. By using mutant fish and human 3D spheroids, we have recently demonstrated that YAP is also a mechano-effector. YAP functions in three-dimensional (3D) morphogenesis of organ and global body shape by controlling actomyosin-mediated tissue tension. In this chapter, we present a platform that links the findings in fish embryos with human cells. The protocols for analyzing tissue tension-mediated global body shape/organ morphogenesis in vivo and ex vivo using medaka fish embryos and in vitro using human cell spheroids represent useful tools for unraveling the molecular mechanisms by which YAP functions in regulating global body/organ morphogenesis. AU - Asaoka, Yoichi AU - Morita, Hitoshi AU - Furumoto, Hiroko AU - Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J AU - Furutani-Seiki, Makoto ED - Hergovich, Alexander ID - 5793 SN - 978-1-4939-8909-6 T2 - The hippo pathway TI - Studying YAP-mediated 3D morphogenesis using fish embryos and human spheroids VL - 1893 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cryptographic security is usually defined as a guarantee that holds except when a bad event with negligible probability occurs, and nothing is guaranteed in that bad case. However, in settings where such failure can happen with substantial probability, one needs to provide guarantees even for the bad case. A typical example is where a (possibly weak) password is used instead of a secure cryptographic key to protect a session, the bad event being that the adversary correctly guesses the password. In a situation with multiple such sessions, a per-session guarantee is desired: any session for which the password has not been guessed remains secure, independently of whether other sessions have been compromised. A new formalism for stating such gracefully degrading security guarantees is introduced and applied to analyze the examples of password-based message authentication and password-based encryption. While a natural per-message guarantee is achieved for authentication, the situation of password-based encryption is more delicate: a per-session confidentiality guarantee only holds against attackers for which the distribution of password-guessing effort over the sessions is known in advance. In contrast, for more general attackers without such a restriction, a strong, composable notion of security cannot be achieved. AU - Demay, Gregory AU - Gazi, Peter AU - Maurer, Ueli AU - Tackmann, Bjorn ID - 5887 IS - 1 JF - Journal of Computer Security SN - 0926227X TI - Per-session security: Password-based cryptography revisited VL - 27 ER - TY - CONF AB - We propose a new non-orthogonal basis to express the 3D Euclidean space in terms of a regular grid. Every grid point, each represented by integer 3-coordinates, corresponds to rhombic dodecahedron centroid. Rhombic dodecahedron is a space filling polyhedron which represents the close packing of spheres in 3D space and the Voronoi structures of the face centered cubic (FCC) lattice. In order to illustrate the interest of the new coordinate system, we propose the characterization of 3D digital plane with its topological features, such as the interrelation between the thickness of the digital plane and the separability constraint we aim to obtain. A characterization of a 3D digital sphere with relevant topological features is proposed as well with the help of a 48 symmetry that comes with the new coordinate system. AU - Biswas, Ranita AU - Largeteau-Skapin, Gaëlle AU - Zrour, Rita AU - Andres, Eric ID - 6163 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - 21st IAPR International Conference on Discrete Geometry for Computer Imagery TI - Rhombic dodecahedron grid—coordinate system and 3D digital object definitions VL - 11414 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We give non-degeneracy criteria for Riemannian simplices based on simplices in spaces of constant sectional curvature. It extends previous work on Riemannian simplices, where we developed Riemannian simplices with respect to Euclidean reference simplices. The criteria we give in this article are in terms of quality measures for spaces of constant curvature that we develop here. We see that simplices in spaces that have nearly constant curvature, are already non-degenerate under very weak quality demands. This is of importance because it allows for sampling of Riemannian manifolds based on anisotropy of the manifold and not (absolute) curvature. AU - Dyer, Ramsay AU - Vegter, Gert AU - Wintraecken, Mathijs ID - 6515 IS - 1 JF - Journal of Computational Geometry SN - 1920-180X TI - Simplices modelled on spaces of constant curvature VL - 10 ER - TY - CONF AB - We construct a verifiable delay function (VDF) by showing how the Rivest-Shamir-Wagner time-lock puzzle can be made publicly verifiable. Concretely, we give a statistically sound public-coin protocol to prove that a tuple (N,x,T,y) satisfies y=x2T (mod N) where the prover doesn’t know the factorization of N and its running time is dominated by solving the puzzle, that is, compute x2T, which is conjectured to require T sequential squarings. To get a VDF we make this protocol non-interactive using the Fiat-Shamir heuristic.The motivation for this work comes from the Chia blockchain design, which uses a VDF as akey ingredient. For typical parameters (T≤2 40, N= 2048), our proofs are of size around 10K B, verification cost around three RSA exponentiations and computing the proof is 8000 times faster than solving the puzzle even without any parallelism. AU - Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z ID - 6528 SN - 1868-8969 T2 - 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference TI - Simple verifiable delay functions VL - 124 ER - TY - CONF AB - In this paper, we address the problem of synthesizing periodic switching controllers for stabilizing a family of linear systems. Our broad approach consists of constructing a finite game graph based on the family of linear systems such that every winning strategy on the game graph corresponds to a stabilizing switching controller for the family of linear systems. The construction of a (finite) game graph, the synthesis of a winning strategy and the extraction of a stabilizing controller are all computationally feasible. We illustrate our method on an example. AU - Kundu, Atreyee AU - Garcia Soto, Miriam AU - Prabhakar, Pavithra ID - 6565 SN - 978-153866246-5 T2 - 5th Indian Control Conference Proceedings TI - Formal synthesis of stabilizing controllers for periodically controlled linear switched systems ER - TY - CONF AB - Fejes Tóth [5] and Schneider [9] studied approximations of smooth convex hypersurfaces in Euclidean space by piecewise flat triangular meshes with a given number of vertices on the hypersurface that are optimal with respect to Hausdorff distance. They proved that this Hausdorff distance decreases inversely proportional with m 2/(d−1), where m is the number of vertices and d is the dimension of Euclidean space. Moreover the pro-portionality constant can be expressed in terms of the Gaussian curvature, an intrinsic quantity. In this short note, we prove the extrinsic nature of this constant for manifolds of sufficiently high codimension. We do so by constructing an family of isometric embeddings of the flat torus in Euclidean space. AU - Vegter, Gert AU - Wintraecken, Mathijs ID - 6628 T2 - The 31st Canadian Conference in Computational Geometry TI - The extrinsic nature of the Hausdorff distance of optimal triangulations of manifolds ER - TY - CONF AB - Various kinds of data are routinely represented as discrete probability distributions. Examples include text documents summarized by histograms of word occurrences and images represented as histograms of oriented gradients. Viewing a discrete probability distribution as a point in the standard simplex of the appropriate dimension, we can understand collections of such objects in geometric and topological terms. Importantly, instead of using the standard Euclidean distance, we look into dissimilarity measures with information-theoretic justification, and we develop the theory needed for applying topological data analysis in this setting. In doing so, we emphasize constructions that enable the usage of existing computational topology software in this context. AU - Edelsbrunner, Herbert AU - Virk, Ziga AU - Wagner, Hubert ID - 6648 SN - 9783959771047 T2 - 35th International Symposium on Computational Geometry TI - Topological data analysis in information space VL - 129 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Chemical labeling of proteins with synthetic molecular probes offers the possibility to probe the functions of proteins of interest in living cells. However, the methods for covalently labeling targeted proteins using complementary peptide tag-probe pairs are still limited, irrespective of the versatility of such pairs in biological research. Herein, we report the new CysHis tag-Ni(II) probe pair for the specific covalent labeling of proteins. A broad-range evaluation of the reactivity profiles of the probe and the CysHis peptide tag afforded a tag-probe pair with an optimized and high labeling selectivity and reactivity. In particular, the labeling specificity of this pair was notably improved compared to the previously reported one. This pair was successfully utilized for the fluorescence imaging of membrane proteins on the surfaces of living cells, demonstrating its potential utility in biological research. AU - Zenmyo, Naoki AU - Tokumaru, Hiroki AU - Uchinomiya, Shohei AU - Fuchida, Hirokazu AU - Tabata, Shigekazu AU - Hamachi, Itaru AU - Shigemoto, Ryuichi AU - Ojida, Akio ID - 6659 IS - 5 JF - Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan SN - 00092673 TI - Optimized reaction pair of the CysHis tag and Ni(II)-NTA probe for highly selective chemical labeling of membrane proteins VL - 92 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In phase retrieval, we want to recover an unknown signal 𝑥∈ℂ𝑑 from n quadratic measurements of the form 𝑦𝑖=|⟨𝑎𝑖,𝑥⟩|2+𝑤𝑖, where 𝑎𝑖∈ℂ𝑑 are known sensing vectors and 𝑤𝑖 is measurement noise. We ask the following weak recovery question: What is the minimum number of measurements n needed to produce an estimator 𝑥^(𝑦) that is positively correlated with the signal 𝑥? We consider the case of Gaussian vectors 𝑎𝑎𝑖. We prove that—in the high-dimensional limit—a sharp phase transition takes place, and we locate the threshold in the regime of vanishingly small noise. For 𝑛≤𝑑−𝑜(𝑑), no estimator can do significantly better than random and achieve a strictly positive correlation. For 𝑛≥𝑑+𝑜(𝑑), a simple spectral estimator achieves a positive correlation. Surprisingly, numerical simulations with the same spectral estimator demonstrate promising performance with realistic sensing matrices. Spectral methods are used to initialize non-convex optimization algorithms in phase retrieval, and our approach can boost the performance in this setting as well. Our impossibility result is based on classical information-theoretic arguments. The spectral algorithm computes the leading eigenvector of a weighted empirical covariance matrix. We obtain a sharp characterization of the spectral properties of this random matrix using tools from free probability and generalizing a recent result by Lu and Li. Both the upper bound and lower bound generalize beyond phase retrieval to measurements 𝑦𝑖 produced according to a generalized linear model. As a by-product of our analysis, we compare the threshold of the proposed spectral method with that of a message passing algorithm. AU - Mondelli, Marco AU - Montanari, Andrea ID - 6662 IS - 3 JF - Foundations of Computational Mathematics TI - Fundamental limits of weak recovery with applications to phase retrieval VL - 19 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The construction of anisotropic triangulations is desirable for various applications, such as the numerical solving of partial differential equations and the representation of surfaces in graphics. To solve this notoriously difficult problem in a practical way, we introduce the discrete Riemannian Voronoi diagram, a discrete structure that approximates the Riemannian Voronoi diagram. This structure has been implemented and was shown to lead to good triangulations in $\mathbb{R}^2$ and on surfaces embedded in $\mathbb{R}^3$ as detailed in our experimental companion paper. In this paper, we study theoretical aspects of our structure. Given a finite set of points $\mathcal{P}$ in a domain $\Omega$ equipped with a Riemannian metric, we compare the discrete Riemannian Voronoi diagram of $\mathcal{P}$ to its Riemannian Voronoi diagram. Both diagrams have dual structures called the discrete Riemannian Delaunay and the Riemannian Delaunay complex. We provide conditions that guarantee that these dual structures are identical. It then follows from previous results that the discrete Riemannian Delaunay complex can be embedded in $\Omega$ under sufficient conditions, leading to an anisotropic triangulation with curved simplices. Furthermore, we show that, under similar conditions, the simplices of this triangulation can be straightened. AU - Boissonnat, Jean-Daniel AU - Rouxel-Labbé, Mael AU - Wintraecken, Mathijs ID - 6672 IS - 3 JF - SIAM Journal on Computing SN - 0097-5397 TI - Anisotropic triangulations via discrete Riemannian Voronoi diagrams VL - 48 ER - TY - CONF AB - A Valued Constraint Satisfaction Problem (VCSP) provides a common framework that can express a wide range of discrete optimization problems. A VCSP instance is given by a finite set of variables, a finite domain of labels, and an objective function to be minimized. This function is represented as a sum of terms where each term depends on a subset of the variables. To obtain different classes of optimization problems, one can restrict all terms to come from a fixed set Γ of cost functions, called a language. Recent breakthrough results have established a complete complexity classification of such classes with respect to language Γ: if all cost functions in Γ satisfy a certain algebraic condition then all Γ-instances can be solved in polynomial time, otherwise the problem is NP-hard. Unfortunately, testing this condition for a given language Γ is known to be NP-hard. We thus study exponential algorithms for this meta-problem. We show that the tractability condition of a finite-valued language Γ can be tested in O(3‾√3|D|⋅poly(size(Γ))) time, where D is the domain of Γ and poly(⋅) is some fixed polynomial. We also obtain a matching lower bound under the Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (SETH). More precisely, we prove that for any constant δ<1 there is no O(3‾√3δ|D|) algorithm, assuming that SETH holds. AU - Kolmogorov, Vladimir ID - 6725 SN - 1868-8969 T2 - 46th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming TI - Testing the complexity of a valued CSP language VL - 132 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Randomness is an essential part of any secure cryptosystem, but many constructions rely on distributions that are not uniform. This is particularly true for lattice based cryptosystems, which more often than not make use of discrete Gaussian distributions over the integers. For practical purposes it is crucial to evaluate the impact that approximation errors have on the security of a scheme to provide the best possible trade-off between security and performance. Recent years have seen surprising results allowing to use relatively low precision while maintaining high levels of security. A key insight in these results is that sampling a distribution with low relative error can provide very strong security guarantees. Since floating point numbers provide guarantees on the relative approximation error, they seem a suitable tool in this setting, but it is not obvious which sampling algorithms can actually profit from them. While previous works have shown that inversion sampling can be adapted to provide a low relative error (Pöppelmann et al., CHES 2014; Prest, ASIACRYPT 2017), other works have called into question if this is possible for other sampling techniques (Zheng et al., Eprint report 2018/309). In this work, we consider all sampling algorithms that are popular in the cryptographic setting and analyze the relationship of floating point precision and the resulting relative error. We show that all of the algorithms either natively achieve a low relative error or can be adapted to do so. AU - Walter, Michael ED - Buchmann, J ED - Nitaj, A ED - Rachidi, T ID - 6726 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019 TI - Sampling the integers with low relative error VL - 11627 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Consider the problem of constructing a polar code of block length N for a given transmission channel W. Previous approaches require one to compute the reliability of the N synthetic channels and then use only those that are sufficiently reliable. However, we know from two independent works by Schürch and by Bardet et al. that the synthetic channels are partially ordered with respect to degradation. Hence, it is natural to ask whether the partial order can be exploited to reduce the computational burden of the construction problem. We show that, if we take advantage of the partial order, we can construct a polar code by computing the reliability of roughly a fraction 1/ log 3/2 N of the synthetic channels. In particular, we prove that N/ log 3/2 N is a lower bound on the number of synthetic channels to be considered and such a bound is tight up to a multiplicative factor log log N. This set of roughly N/ log 3/2 N synthetic channels is universal, in the sense that it allows one to construct polar codes for any W, and it can be identified by solving a maximum matching problem on a bipartite graph. Our proof technique consists of reducing the construction problem to the problem of computing the maximum cardinality of an antichain for a suitable partially ordered set. As such, this method is general, and it can be used to further improve the complexity of the construction problem, in case a refined partial order on the synthetic channels of polar codes is discovered. AU - Mondelli, Marco AU - Hassani, Hamed AU - Urbanke, Rudiger ID - 6663 IS - 5 JF - IEEE TI - Construction of polar codes with sublinear complexity VL - 65 ER -