TY - JOUR AB - We say that (Formula presented.) if, in every edge coloring (Formula presented.), we can find either a 1-colored copy of (Formula presented.) or a 2-colored copy of (Formula presented.). The well-known states that the threshold for the property (Formula presented.) is equal to (Formula presented.), where (Formula presented.) is given by (Formula presented.) for any pair of graphs (Formula presented.) and (Formula presented.) with (Formula presented.). In this article, we show the 0-statement of the Kohayakawa–Kreuter conjecture for every pair of cycles and cliques. AU - Liebenau, Anita AU - Mattos, Letícia AU - Mendonca Dos Santos, Walner AU - Skokan, Jozef ID - 11706 IS - 4 JF - Random Structures and Algorithms SN - 1042-9832 TI - Asymmetric Ramsey properties of random graphs involving cliques and cycles VL - 62 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We establish precise right-tail small deviation estimates for the largest eigenvalue of real symmetric and complex Hermitian matrices whose entries are independent random variables with uniformly bounded moments. The proof relies on a Green function comparison along a continuous interpolating matrix flow for a long time. Less precise estimates are also obtained in the left tail. AU - Erdös, László AU - Xu, Yuanyuan ID - 12707 IS - 2 JF - Bernoulli SN - 1350-7265 TI - Small deviation estimates for the largest eigenvalue of Wigner matrices VL - 29 ER - TY - JOUR AB - As developing tissues grow in size and undergo morphogenetic changes, their material properties may be altered. Such changes result from tension dynamics at cell contacts or cellular jamming. Yet, in many cases, the cellular mechanisms controlling the physical state of growing tissues are unclear. We found that at early developmental stages, the epithelium in the developing mouse spinal cord maintains both high junctional tension and high fluidity. This is achieved via a mechanism in which interkinetic nuclear movements generate cell area dynamics that drive extensive cell rearrangements. Over time, the cell proliferation rate declines, effectively solidifying the tissue. Thus, unlike well-studied jamming transitions, the solidification uncovered here resembles a glass transition that depends on the dynamical stresses generated by proliferation and differentiation. Our finding that the fluidity of developing epithelia is linked to interkinetic nuclear movements and the dynamics of growth is likely to be relevant to multiple developing tissues. AU - Bocanegra, Laura AU - Singh, Amrita AU - Hannezo, Edouard B AU - Zagórski, Marcin P AU - Kicheva, Anna ID - 12837 JF - Nature Physics SN - 1745-2473 TI - Cell cycle dynamics control fluidity of the developing mouse neuroepithelium VL - 19 ER - TY - THES AB - During development, tissues undergo changes in size and shape to form functional organs. Distinct cellular processes such as cell division and cell rearrangements underlie tissue morphogenesis. Yet how the distinct processes are controlled and coordinated, and how they contribute to morphogenesis is poorly understood. In our study, we addressed these questions using the developing mouse neural tube. This epithelial organ transforms from a flat epithelial sheet to an epithelial tube while increasing in size and undergoing morpho-gen-mediated patterning. The extent and mechanism of neural progenitor rearrangement within the developing mouse neuroepithelium is unknown. To investigate this, we per-formed high resolution lineage tracing analysis to quantify the extent of epithelial rear-rangement at different stages of neural tube development. We quantitatively described the relationship between apical cell size with cell cycle dependent interkinetic nuclear migra-tions (IKNM) and performed high cellular resolution live imaging of the neuroepithelium to study the dynamics of junctional remodeling. Furthermore, developed a vertex model of the neuroepithelium to investigate the quantitative contribution of cell proliferation, cell differentiation and mechanical properties to the epithelial rearrangement dynamics and validated the model predictions through functional experiments. Our analysis revealed that at early developmental stages, the apical cell area kinetics driven by IKNM induce high lev-els of cell rearrangements in a regime of high junctional tension and contractility. After E9.5, there is a sharp decline in the extent of cell rearrangements, suggesting that the epi-thelium transitions from a fluid-like to a solid-like state. We found that this transition is regulated by the growth rate of the tissue, rather than by changes in cell-cell adhesion and contractile forces. Overall, our study provides a quantitative description of the relationship between tissue growth, cell cycle dynamics, epithelia rearrangements and the emergent tissue material properties, and novel insights on how epithelial cell dynamics influences tissue morphogenesis. AU - Bocanegra, Laura ID - 13081 SN - 2663 - 337X TI - Epithelial dynamics during mouse neural tube development ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the present study, essential and nonessential metal content and biomarker responses were investigated in the intestine of fish collected from the areas polluted by mining. Our objective was to determine metal and biomarker levels in tissue responsible for dietary intake, which is rarely studied in water pollution research. The study was conducted in the Bregalnica River, reference location, and in the Zletovska and Kriva Rivers (the Republic of North Macedonia), which are directly influenced by the active mines Zletovo and Toranica, respectively. Biological responses were analyzed in Vardar chub (Squalius vardarensis; Karaman, 1928), using for the first time intestinal cytosol as a potentially toxic cell fraction, since metal sensitivity is mostly associated with cytosol. Cytosolic metal levels were higher in fish under the influence of mining (Tl, Li, Cs, Mo, Sr, Cd, Rb, and Cu in the Zletovska River and Cr, Pb, and Se in the Kriva River compared to the Bregalnica River in both seasons). The same trend was evident for total proteins, biomarkers of general stress, and metallothioneins, biomarkers of metal exposure, indicating cellular disturbances in the intestine, the primary site of dietary metal uptake. The association of cytosolic Cu and Cd at all locations pointed to similar pathways and homeostasis of these metallothionein-binding metals. Comparison with other indicator tissues showed that metal concentrations were higher in the intestine of fish from mining-affected areas than in the liver and gills. In general, these results indicated the importance of dietary metal pathways, and cytosolic metal fraction in assessing pollution impacts in freshwater ecosystems. AU - Filipović Marijić, Vlatka AU - Krasnici, Nesrete AU - Valić, Damir AU - Kapetanović, Damir AU - Vardić Smrzlić, Irena AU - Jordanova, Maja AU - Rebok, Katerina AU - Ramani, Sheriban AU - Kostov, Vasil AU - Nastova, Rodne AU - Dragun, Zrinka ID - 12863 JF - Environmental Science and Pollution Research SN - 0944-1344 TI - Pollution impact on metal and biomarker responses in intestinal cytosol of freshwater fish VL - 30 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Coherent control and manipulation of quantum degrees of freedom such as spins forms the basis of emerging quantum technologies. In this context, the robust valley degree of freedom and the associated valley pseudospin found in two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides is a highly attractive platform. Valley polarization and coherent superposition of valley states have been observed in these systems even up to room temperature. Control of valley coherence is an important building block for the implementation of valley qubit. Large magnetic fields or high-power lasers have been used in the past to demonstrate the control (initialization and rotation) of the valley coherent states. Here, the control of layer–valley coherence via strong coupling of valley excitons in bilayer WS2 to microcavity photons is demonstrated by exploiting the pseudomagnetic field arising in optical cavities owing to the transverse electric–transverse magnetic (TE–TM)mode splitting. The use of photonic structures to generate pseudomagnetic fields which can be used to manipulate exciton-polaritons presents an attractive approach to control optical responses without the need for large magnets or high-intensity optical pump powers. AU - Khatoniar, Mandeep AU - Yama, Nicholas AU - Ghazaryan, Areg AU - Guddala, Sriram AU - Ghaemi, Pouyan AU - Majumdar, Kausik AU - Menon, Vinod ID - 12836 IS - 13 JF - Advanced Optical Materials TI - Optical manipulation of Layer–Valley coherence via strong exciton–photon coupling in microcavities VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This paper deals with the large-scale behaviour of dynamical optimal transport on Zd -periodic graphs with general lower semicontinuous and convex energy densities. Our main contribution is a homogenisation result that describes the effective behaviour of the discrete problems in terms of a continuous optimal transport problem. The effective energy density can be explicitly expressed in terms of a cell formula, which is a finite-dimensional convex programming problem that depends non-trivially on the local geometry of the discrete graph and the discrete energy density. Our homogenisation result is derived from a Γ -convergence result for action functionals on curves of measures, which we prove under very mild growth conditions on the energy density. We investigate the cell formula in several cases of interest, including finite-volume discretisations of the Wasserstein distance, where non-trivial limiting behaviour occurs. AU - Gladbach, Peter AU - Kopfer, Eva AU - Maas, Jan AU - Portinale, Lorenzo ID - 12959 IS - 5 JF - Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations SN - 0944-2669 TI - Homogenisation of dynamical optimal transport on periodic graphs VL - 62 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cu2–xS and Cu2–xSe have recently been reported as promising thermoelectric (TE) materials for medium-temperature applications. In contrast, Cu2–xTe, another member of the copper chalcogenide family, typically exhibits low Seebeck coefficients that limit its potential to achieve a superior thermoelectric figure of merit, zT, particularly in the low-temperature range where this material could be effective. To address this, we investigated the TE performance of Cu1.5–xTe–Cu2Se nanocomposites by consolidating surface-engineered Cu1.5Te nanocrystals. This surface engineering strategy allows for precise adjustment of Cu/Te ratios and results in a reversible phase transition at around 600 K in Cu1.5–xTe–Cu2Se nanocomposites, as systematically confirmed by in situ high-temperature X-ray diffraction combined with differential scanning calorimetry analysis. The phase transition leads to a conversion from metallic-like to semiconducting-like TE properties. Additionally, a layer of Cu2Se generated around Cu1.5–xTe nanoparticles effectively inhibits Cu1.5–xTe grain growth, minimizing thermal conductivity and decreasing hole concentration. These properties indicate that copper telluride based compounds have a promising thermoelectric potential, translated into a high dimensionless zT of 1.3 at 560 K. AU - Xing, Congcong AU - Zhang, Yu AU - Xiao, Ke AU - Han, Xu AU - Liu, Yu AU - Nan, Bingfei AU - Ramon, Maria Garcia AU - Lim, Khak Ho AU - Li, Junshan AU - Arbiol, Jordi AU - Poudel, Bed AU - Nozariasbmarz, Amin AU - Li, Wenjie AU - Ibáñez, Maria AU - Cabot, Andreu ID - 12915 IS - 9 JF - ACS Nano SN - 1936-0851 TI - Thermoelectric performance of surface-engineered Cu1.5–xTe–Cu2Se nanocomposites VL - 17 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Two notes separated by a doubling in frequency sound similar to humans. This “octave equivalence” is critical to perception and production of music and speech and occurs early in human development. Because it also occurs cross-culturally, a biological basis of octave equivalence has been hypothesized. Members of our team previousy suggested four human traits are at the root of this phenomenon: (1) vocal learning, (2) clear octave information in vocal harmonics, (3) differing vocal ranges, and (4) vocalizing together. Using cross-species studies, we can test how relevant these respective traits are, while controlling for enculturation effects and addressing questions of phylogeny. Common marmosets possess forms of three of the four traits, lacking differing vocal ranges. We tested 11 common marmosets by adapting an established head-turning paradigm, creating a parallel test to an important infant study. Unlike human infants, marmosets responded similarly to tones shifted by an octave or other intervals. Because previous studies with the same head-turning paradigm produced differential results to discernable acoustic stimuli in common marmosets, our results suggest that marmosets do not perceive octave equivalence. Our work suggests differing vocal ranges between adults and children and men and women and the way they are used in singing together may be critical to the development of octave equivalence. AU - Wagner, Bernhard AU - Šlipogor, Vedrana AU - Oh, Jinook AU - Varga, Marion AU - Hoeschele, Marisa ID - 12961 IS - 5 JF - Developmental Science SN - 1363-755X TI - A comparison between common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) and human infants sheds light on traits proposed to be at the root of human octave equivalence VL - 26 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider billiards obtained by removing from the plane finitely many strictly convex analytic obstacles satisfying the non-eclipse condition. The restriction of the dynamics to the set of non-escaping orbits is conjugated to a subshift, which provides a natural labeling of periodic orbits. We show that under suitable symmetry and genericity assumptions, the Marked Length Spectrum determines the geometry of the billiard table. AU - De Simoi, Jacopo AU - Kaloshin, Vadim AU - Leguil, Martin ID - 12877 JF - Inventiones Mathematicae SN - 0020-9910 TI - Marked Length Spectral determination of analytic chaotic billiards with axial symmetries VL - 233 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Statistics of natural scenes are not uniform - their structure varies dramatically from ground to sky. It remains unknown whether these non-uniformities are reflected in the large-scale organization of the early visual system and what benefits such adaptations would confer. Here, by relying on the efficient coding hypothesis, we predict that changes in the structure of receptive fields across visual space increase the efficiency of sensory coding. We show experimentally that, in agreement with our predictions, receptive fields of retinal ganglion cells change their shape along the dorsoventral retinal axis, with a marked surround asymmetry at the visual horizon. Our work demonstrates that, according to principles of efficient coding, the panoramic structure of natural scenes is exploited by the retina across space and cell-types. AU - Gupta, Divyansh AU - Mlynarski, Wiktor F AU - Sumser, Anton L AU - Symonova, Olga AU - Svaton, Jan AU - Jösch, Maximilian A ID - 12349 JF - Nature Neuroscience SN - 1097-6256 TI - Panoramic visual statistics shape retina-wide organization of receptive fields VL - 26 ER - TY - DATA AB - Statistics of natural scenes are not uniform - their structure varies dramatically from ground to sky. It remains unknown whether these non-uniformities are reflected in the large-scale organization of the early visual system and what benefits such adaptations would confer. Here, by relying on the efficient coding hypothesis, we predict that changes in the structure of receptive fields across visual space increase the efficiency of sensory coding. We show experimentally that, in agreement with our predictions, receptive fields of retinal ganglion cells change their shape along the dorsoventral retinal axis, with a marked surround asymmetry at the visual horizon. Our work demonstrates that, according to principles of efficient coding, the panoramic structure of natural scenes is exploited by the retina across space and cell-types. AU - Gupta, Divyansh AU - Sumser, Anton L AU - Jösch, Maximilian A ID - 12370 TI - Research Data for: Panoramic visual statistics shape retina-wide organization of receptive fields ER - TY - JOUR AB - The deployment of direct formate fuel cells (DFFCs) relies on the development of active and stable catalysts for the formate oxidation reaction (FOR). Palladium, providing effective full oxidation of formate to CO2, has been widely used as FOR catalyst, but it suffers from low stability, moderate activity, and high cost. Herein, we detail a colloidal synthesis route for the incorporation of P on Pd2Sn nanoparticles. These nanoparticles are dispersed on carbon black and the obtained composite is used as electrocatalytic material for the FOR. The Pd2Sn0.8P-based electrodes present outstanding catalytic activities with record mass current densities up to 10.0 A mgPd-1, well above those of Pd1.6Sn/C reference electrode. These high current densities are further enhanced by increasing the temperature from 25 °C to 40 °C. The Pd2Sn0.8P electrode also allows for slowing down the rapid current decay that generally happens during operation and can be rapidly re-activated through potential cycling. The excellent catalytic performance obtained is rationalized using density functional theory (DFT) calculations. AU - Montaña-Mora, Guillem AU - Qi, Xueqiang AU - Wang, Xiang AU - Chacón-Borrero, Jesus AU - Martinez-Alanis, Paulina R. AU - Yu, Xiaoting AU - Li, Junshan AU - Xue, Qian AU - Arbiol, Jordi AU - Ibáñez, Maria AU - Cabot, Andreu ID - 12829 JF - Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry SN - 1572-6657 TI - Phosphorous incorporation into palladium tin nanoparticles for the electrocatalytic formate oxidation reaction VL - 936 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We study a new discretization of the Gaussian curvature for polyhedral surfaces. This discrete Gaussian curvature is defined on each conical singularity of a polyhedral surface as the quotient of the angle defect and the area of the Voronoi cell corresponding to the singularity. We divide polyhedral surfaces into discrete conformal classes using a generalization of discrete conformal equivalence pioneered by Feng Luo. We subsequently show that, in every discrete conformal class, there exists a polyhedral surface with constant discrete Gaussian curvature. We also provide explicit examples to demonstrate that this surface is in general not unique. AU - Kourimska, Hana ID - 12764 JF - Discrete and Computational Geometry SN - 0179-5376 TI - Discrete yamabe problem for polyhedral surfaces VL - 70 ER - TY - THES AB - The extension of extremal combinatorics to the setting of exterior algebra is a work in progress that gained attention recently. In this thesis, we study the combinatorial structure of exterior algebra by introducing a dictionary that translates the notions from the set systems into the framework of exterior algebra. We show both generalizations of celebrated Erdös--Ko--Rado theorem and Hilton--Milner theorem to the setting of exterior algebra in the simplest non-trivial case of two-forms. AU - Köse, Seyda ID - 13331 SN - 2791-4585 TI - Exterior algebra and combinatorics ER - TY - JOUR AB - Animals exhibit a variety of behavioural defences against socially transmitted parasites. These defences evolved to increase host fitness by avoiding, resisting or tolerating infection. Because they can occur in both infected individuals and their uninfected social partners, these defences often have important consequences for the social group. Here, we discuss the evolution and ecology of anti-parasite behavioural defences across a taxonomically wide social spectrum, considering colonial groups, stable groups, transitional groups and solitary animals. We discuss avoidance, resistance and tolerance behaviours across these social group structures, identifying how social complexity, group composition and interdependent social relationships may contribute to the expression and evolution of behavioural strategies. Finally, we outline avenues for further investigation such as approaches to quantify group-level responses, and the connection of the physiological and behavioural response to parasites in different social contexts. AU - Stockmaier, Sebastian AU - Ulrich, Yuko AU - Albery, Gregory F. AU - Cremer, Sylvia AU - Lopes, Patricia C. ID - 12765 IS - 4 JF - Functional Ecology SN - 0269-8463 TI - Behavioural defences against parasites across host social structures VL - 37 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The celebrated Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem about the maximal size of an intersecting family of r-element subsets of was extended to the setting of exterior algebra in [5, Theorem 2.3] and in [6, Theorem 1.4]. However, the equality case has not been settled yet. In this short note, we show that the extension of the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem and the characterization of the equality case therein, as well as those of the Hilton–Milner theorem to the setting of exterior algebra in the simplest non-trivial case of two-forms follow from a folklore puzzle about possible arrangements of an intersecting family of lines. AU - Ivanov, Grigory AU - Köse, Seyda ID - 12680 IS - 6 JF - Discrete Mathematics SN - 0012-365X TI - Erdős-Ko-Rado and Hilton-Milner theorems for two-forms VL - 346 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the physics literature the spectral form factor (SFF), the squared Fourier transform of the empirical eigenvalue density, is the most common tool to test universality for disordered quantum systems, yet previous mathematical results have been restricted only to two exactly solvable models (Forrester in J Stat Phys 183:33, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10955-021-02767-5, Commun Math Phys 387:215–235, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00220-021-04193-w). We rigorously prove the physics prediction on SFF up to an intermediate time scale for a large class of random matrices using a robust method, the multi-resolvent local laws. Beyond Wigner matrices we also consider the monoparametric ensemble and prove that universality of SFF can already be triggered by a single random parameter, supplementing the recently proven Wigner–Dyson universality (Cipolloni et al. in Probab Theory Relat Fields, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00440-022-01156-7) to larger spectral scales. Remarkably, extensive numerics indicates that our formulas correctly predict the SFF in the entire slope-dip-ramp regime, as customarily called in physics. AU - Cipolloni, Giorgio AU - Erdös, László AU - Schröder, Dominik J ID - 12792 JF - Communications in Mathematical Physics SN - 0010-3616 TI - On the spectral form factor for random matrices VL - 401 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Given a finite set A ⊂ ℝ^d, let Cov_{r,k} denote the set of all points within distance r to at least k points of A. Allowing r and k to vary, we obtain a 2-parameter family of spaces that grow larger when r increases or k decreases, called the multicover bifiltration. Motivated by the problem of computing the homology of this bifiltration, we introduce two closely related combinatorial bifiltrations, one polyhedral and the other simplicial, which are both topologically equivalent to the multicover bifiltration and far smaller than a Čech-based model considered in prior work of Sheehy. Our polyhedral construction is a bifiltration of the rhomboid tiling of Edelsbrunner and Osang, and can be efficiently computed using a variant of an algorithm given by these authors as well. Using an implementation for dimension 2 and 3, we provide experimental results. Our simplicial construction is useful for understanding the polyhedral construction and proving its correctness. AU - Corbet, René AU - Kerber, Michael AU - Lesnick, Michael AU - Osang, Georg F ID - 12709 JF - Discrete and Computational Geometry SN - 0179-5376 TI - Computing the multicover bifiltration VL - 70 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Kleinjohann (Archiv der Mathematik 35(1):574–582, 1980; Mathematische Zeitschrift 176(3), 327–344, 1981) and Bangert (Archiv der Mathematik 38(1):54–57, 1982) extended the reach rch(S) from subsets S of Euclidean space to the reach rchM(S) of subsets S of Riemannian manifolds M, where M is smooth (we’ll assume at least C3). Bangert showed that sets of positive reach in Euclidean space and Riemannian manifolds are very similar. In this paper we introduce a slight variant of Kleinjohann’s and Bangert’s extension and quantify the similarity between sets of positive reach in Euclidean space and Riemannian manifolds in a new way: Given p∈M and q∈S, we bound the local feature size (a local version of the reach) of its lifting to the tangent space via the inverse exponential map (exp−1p(S)) at q, assuming that rchM(S) and the geodesic distance dM(p,q) are bounded. These bounds are motivated by the importance of the reach and local feature size to manifold learning, topological inference, and triangulating manifolds and the fact that intrinsic approaches circumvent the curse of dimensionality. AU - Boissonnat, Jean Daniel AU - Wintraecken, Mathijs ID - 12763 JF - Journal of Applied and Computational Topology SN - 2367-1726 TI - The reach of subsets of manifolds VL - 7 ER - TY - CONF AB - The safety-liveness dichotomy is a fundamental concept in formal languages which plays a key role in verification. Recently, this dichotomy has been lifted to quantitative properties, which are arbitrary functions from infinite words to partially-ordered domains. We look into harnessing the dichotomy for the specific classes of quantitative properties expressed by quantitative automata. These automata contain finitely many states and rational-valued transition weights, and their common value functions Inf, Sup, LimInf, LimSup, LimInfAvg, LimSupAvg, and DSum map infinite words into the totallyordered domain of real numbers. In this automata-theoretic setting, we establish a connection between quantitative safety and topological continuity and provide an alternative characterization of quantitative safety and liveness in terms of their boolean counterparts. For all common value functions, we show how the safety closure of a quantitative automaton can be constructed in PTime, and we provide PSpace-complete checks of whether a given quantitative automaton is safe or live, with the exception of LimInfAvg and LimSupAvg automata, for which the safety check is in ExpSpace. Moreover, for deterministic Sup, LimInf, and LimSup automata, we give PTime decompositions into safe and live automata. These decompositions enable the separation of techniques for safety and liveness verification for quantitative specifications. AU - Boker, Udi AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Mazzocchi, Nicolas Adrien AU - Sarac, Naci E ID - 13221 SN - 9783959772990 T2 - 34th International Conference on Concurrency Theory TI - Safety and liveness of quantitative automata VL - 279 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Recently, a concept of generalized multifractality, which characterizes fluctuations and correlations of critical eigenstates, was introduced and explored for all 10 symmetry classes of disordered systems. Here, by using the nonlinear sigma-model ( NL σ M ) field theory, we extend the theory of generalized multifractality to boundaries of systems at criticality. Our numerical simulations on two-dimensional systems of symmetry classes A, C, and AII fully confirm the analytical predictions of pure-scaling observables and Weyl symmetry relations between critical exponents of surface generalized multifractality. This demonstrates the validity of the NL σ M for the description of Anderson-localization critical phenomena, not only in the bulk but also on the boundary. The critical exponents strongly violate generalized parabolicity, in analogy with earlier results for the bulk, corroborating the conclusion that the considered Anderson-localization critical points are not described by conformal field theories. We further derive relations between generalized surface multifractal spectra and linear combinations of Lyapunov exponents of a strip in quasi-one-dimensional geometry, which hold under the assumption of invariance with respect to a logarithmic conformal map. Our numerics demonstrate that these relations hold with an excellent accuracy. Taken together, our results indicate an intriguing situation: the conformal invariance is broken but holds partially at critical points of Anderson localization. AU - Babkin, Serafim AU - Karcher, Jonas F. AU - Burmistrov, Igor S. AU - Mirlin, Alexander D. ID - 14406 IS - 10 JF - Physical Review B SN - 2469-9950 TI - Generalized surface multifractality in two-dimensional disordered systems VL - 108 ER - TY - CONF AB - This paper focuses on the implementation details of the baseline methods and a recent lightweight conditional model extrapolation algorithm LIMES [5] for streaming data under class-prior shift. LIMES achieves superior performance over the baseline methods, especially concerning the minimum-across-day accuracy, which is important for the users of the system. In this work, the key measures to facilitate reproducibility and enhance the credibility of the results are described. AU - Tomaszewska, Paulina AU - Lampert, Christoph ID - 14410 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - International Workshop on Reproducible Research in Pattern Recognition TI - On the implementation of baselines and lightweight conditional model extrapolation (LIMES) under class-prior shift VL - 14068 ER - TY - CONF AB - We introduce hypernode automata as a new specification formalism for hyperproperties of concurrent systems. They are finite automata with nodes labeled with hypernode logic formulas and transitions labeled with actions. A hypernode logic formula specifies relations between sequences of variable values in different system executions. Unlike HyperLTL, hypernode logic takes an asynchronous view on execution traces by constraining the values and the order of value changes of each variable without correlating the timing of the changes. Different execution traces are synchronized solely through the transitions of hypernode automata. Hypernode automata naturally combine asynchronicity at the node level with synchronicity at the transition level. We show that the model-checking problem for hypernode automata is decidable over action-labeled Kripke structures, whose actions induce transitions of the specification automata. For this reason, hypernode automaton is a suitable formalism for specifying and verifying asynchronous hyperproperties, such as declassifying observational determinism in multi-threaded programs. AU - Bartocci, Ezio AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Nickovic, Dejan AU - Oliveira da Costa, Ana ID - 14405 SN - 18688969 T2 - 34th International Conference on Concurrency Theory TI - Hypernode automata VL - 279 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We prove that the mesoscopic linear statistics ∑if(na(σi−z0)) of the eigenvalues {σi}i of large n×n non-Hermitian random matrices with complex centred i.i.d. entries are asymptotically Gaussian for any H20-functions f around any point z0 in the bulk of the spectrum on any mesoscopic scale 01+N−1/3+ϵ, for any ϵ>0. The study of this natural process combines elements of Hermitian and non-Hermitian analysis, and illustrates some aspects of the intrinsic instability of (even weakly) non-Hermitian matrices. AU - Dubach, Guillaume AU - Erdös, László ID - 12683 JF - Electronic Communications in Probability TI - Dynamics of a rank-one perturbation of a Hermitian matrix VL - 28 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider the fluctuations of regular functions f of a Wigner matrix W viewed as an entire matrix f (W). Going beyond the well-studied tracial mode, Trf (W), which is equivalent to the customary linear statistics of eigenvalues, we show that Trf (W)A is asymptotically normal for any nontrivial bounded deterministic matrix A. We identify three different and asymptotically independent modes of this fluctuation, corresponding to the tracial part, the traceless diagonal part and the off-diagonal part of f (W) in the entire mesoscopic regime, where we find that the off-diagonal modes fluctuate on a much smaller scale than the tracial mode. As a main motivation to study CLT in such generality on small mesoscopic scales, we determine the fluctuations in the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (Phys. Rev. A 43 (1991) 2046–2049), that is, prove that the eigenfunction overlaps with any deterministic matrix are asymptotically Gaussian after a small spectral averaging. Finally, in the macroscopic regime our result also generalizes (Zh. Mat. Fiz. Anal. Geom. 9 (2013) 536–581, 611, 615) to complex W and to all crossover ensembles in between. The main technical inputs are the recent multiresolvent local laws with traceless deterministic matrices from the companion paper (Comm. Math. Phys. 388 (2021) 1005–1048). AU - Cipolloni, Giorgio AU - Erdös, László AU - Schröder, Dominik J ID - 12761 IS - 1 JF - Annals of Applied Probability SN - 1050-5164 TI - Functional central limit theorems for Wigner matrices VL - 33 ER - TY - JOUR AB - It is known that the Brauer--Manin obstruction to the Hasse principle is vacuous for smooth Fano hypersurfaces of dimension at least 3 over any number field. Moreover, for such varieties it follows from a general conjecture of Colliot-Thélène that the Brauer--Manin obstruction to the Hasse principle should be the only one, so that the Hasse principle is expected to hold. Working over the field of rational numbers and ordering Fano hypersurfaces of fixed degree and dimension by height, we prove that almost every such hypersurface satisfies the Hasse principle provided that the dimension is at least 3. This proves a conjecture of Poonen and Voloch in every case except for cubic surfaces. AU - Browning, Timothy D AU - Boudec, Pierre Le AU - Sawin, Will ID - 8682 IS - 3 JF - Annals of Mathematics SN - 0003-486X TI - The Hasse principle for random Fano hypersurfaces VL - 197 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Allometric settings of population dynamics models are appealing due to their parsimonious nature and broad utility when studying system level effects. Here, we parameterise the size-scaled Rosenzweig-MacArthur differential equations to eliminate prey-mass dependency, facilitating an in depth analytic study of the equations which incorporates scaling parameters’ contributions to coexistence. We define the functional response term to match empirical findings, and examine situations where metabolic theory derivations and observation diverge. The dynamical properties of the Rosenzweig-MacArthur system, encompassing the distribution of size-abundance equilibria, the scaling of period and amplitude of population cycling, and relationships between predator and prey abundances, are consistent with empirical observation. Our parameterisation is an accurate minimal model across 15+ orders of mass magnitude. AU - Mckerral, Jody C. AU - Kleshnina, Maria AU - Ejov, Vladimir AU - Bartle, Louise AU - Mitchell, James G. AU - Filar, Jerzy A. ID - 12706 IS - 2 JF - PLoS One TI - Empirical parameterisation and dynamical analysis of the allometric Rosenzweig-MacArthur equations VL - 18 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2) plays an essential role in neuronal activities through interaction with various proteins involved in signaling at membranes. However, the distribution pattern of PI(4,5)P2 and the association with these proteins on the neuronal cell membranes remain elusive. In this study, we established a method for visualizing PI(4,5)P2 by SDS-digested freeze-fracture replica labeling (SDS-FRL) to investigate the quantitative nanoscale distribution of PI(4,5)P2 in cryo-fixed brain. We demonstrate that PI(4,5)P2 forms tiny clusters with a mean size of ∼1000 nm2 rather than randomly distributed in cerebellar neuronal membranes in male C57BL/6J mice. These clusters show preferential accumulation in specific membrane compartments of different cell types, in particular, in Purkinje cell (PC) spines and granule cell (GC) presynaptic active zones. Furthermore, we revealed extensive association of PI(4,5)P2 with CaV2.1 and GIRK3 across different membrane compartments, whereas its association with mGluR1α was compartment specific. These results suggest that our SDS-FRL method provides valuable insights into the physiological functions of PI(4,5)P2 in neurons. AU - Eguchi, Kohgaku AU - Le Monnier, Elodie AU - Shigemoto, Ryuichi ID - 13202 IS - 23 JF - The Journal of Neuroscience SN - 0270-6474 TI - Nanoscale phosphoinositide distribution on cell membranes of mouse cerebellar neurons VL - 43 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We apply a variant of the square-sieve to produce an upper bound for the number of rational points of bounded height on a family of surfaces that admit a fibration over P1 whose general fibre is a hyperelliptic curve. The implied constant does not depend on the coefficients of the polynomial defining the surface. AU - Bonolis, Dante AU - Browning, Timothy D ID - 12916 IS - 1 JF - Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa - Classe di Scienze SN - 0391-173X TI - Uniform bounds for rational points on hyperelliptic fibrations VL - 24 ER - TY - THES AB - Animals exhibit a remarkable ability to learn and remember new behaviors, skills, and associations throughout their lifetime. These capabilities are made possible thanks to a variety of changes in the brain throughout adulthood, regrouped under the term "plasticity". Some cells in the brain —neurons— and specifically changes in the connections between neurons, the synapses, were shown to be crucial for the formation, selection, and consolidation of memories from past experiences. These ongoing changes of synapses across time are called synaptic plasticity. Understanding how a myriad of biochemical processes operating at individual synapses can somehow work in concert to give rise to meaningful changes in behavior is a fascinating problem and an active area of research. However, the experimental search for the precise plasticity mechanisms at play in the brain is daunting, as it is difficult to control and observe synapses during learning. Theoretical approaches have thus been the default method to probe the plasticity-behavior connection. Such studies attempt to extract unifying principles across synapses and model all observed synaptic changes using plasticity rules: equations that govern the evolution of synaptic strengths across time in neuronal network models. These rules can use many relevant quantities to determine the magnitude of synaptic changes, such as the precise timings of pre- and postsynaptic action potentials, the recent neuronal activity levels, the state of neighboring synapses, etc. However, analytical studies rely heavily on human intuition and are forced to make simplifying assumptions about plasticity rules. In this thesis, we aim to assist and augment human intuition in this search for plasticity rules. We explore whether a numerical approach could automatically discover the plasticity rules that elicit desired behaviors in large networks of interconnected neurons. This approach is dubbed meta-learning synaptic plasticity: learning plasticity rules which themselves will make neuronal networks learn how to solve a desired task. We first write all the potential plasticity mechanisms to consider using a single expression with adjustable parameters. We then optimize these plasticity parameters using evolutionary strategies or Bayesian inference on tasks known to involve synaptic plasticity, such as familiarity detection and network stabilization. We show that these automated approaches are powerful tools, able to complement established analytical methods. By comprehensively screening plasticity rules at all synapse types in realistic, spiking neuronal network models, we discover entire sets of degenerate plausible plasticity rules that reliably elicit memory-related behaviors. Our approaches allow for more robust experimental predictions, by abstracting out the idiosyncrasies of individual plasticity rules, and provide fresh insights on synaptic plasticity in spiking network models. AU - Confavreux, Basile J ID - 14422 SN - 2663 - 337X TI - Synapseek: Meta-learning synaptic plasticity rules ER - TY - THES AB - Superconductivity has many important applications ranging from levitating trains over qubits to MRI scanners. The phenomenon is successfully modeled by Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory. From a mathematical perspective, BCS theory has been studied extensively for systems without boundary. However, little is known in the presence of boundaries. With the help of numerical methods physicists observed that the critical temperature may increase in the presence of a boundary. The goal of this thesis is to understand the influence of boundaries on the critical temperature in BCS theory and to give a first rigorous justification of these observations. On the way, we also study two-body Schrödinger operators on domains with boundaries and prove additional results for superconductors without boundary. BCS theory is based on a non-linear functional, where the minimizer indicates whether the system is superconducting or in the normal, non-superconducting state. By considering the Hessian of the BCS functional at the normal state, one can analyze whether the normal state is possibly a minimum of the BCS functional and estimate the critical temperature. The Hessian turns out to be a linear operator resembling a Schrödinger operator for two interacting particles, but with more complicated kinetic energy. As a first step, we study the two-body Schrödinger operator in the presence of boundaries. For Neumann boundary conditions, we prove that the addition of a boundary can create new eigenvalues, which correspond to the two particles forming a bound state close to the boundary. Second, we need to understand superconductivity in the translation invariant setting. While in three dimensions this has been extensively studied, there is no mathematical literature for the one and two dimensional cases. In dimensions one and two, we compute the weak coupling asymptotics of the critical temperature and the energy gap in the translation invariant setting. We also prove that their ratio is independent of the microscopic details of the model in the weak coupling limit; this property is referred to as universality. In the third part, we study the critical temperature of superconductors in the presence of boundaries. We start by considering the one-dimensional case of a half-line with contact interaction. Then, we generalize the results to generic interactions and half-spaces in one, two and three dimensions. Finally, we compare the critical temperature of a quarter space in two dimensions to the critical temperatures of a half-space and of the full space. AU - Roos, Barbara ID - 14374 SN - 2663 - 337X TI - Boundary superconductivity in BCS theory ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider the linear BCS equation, determining the BCS critical temperature, in the presence of a boundary, where Dirichlet boundary conditions are imposed. In the one-dimensional case with point interactions, we prove that the critical temperature is strictly larger than the bulk value, at least at weak coupling. In particular, the Cooper-pair wave function localizes near the boundary, an effect that cannot be modeled by effective Neumann boundary conditions on the order parameter as often imposed in Ginzburg–Landau theory. We also show that the relative shift in critical temperature vanishes if the coupling constant either goes to zero or to infinity. AU - Hainzl, Christian AU - Roos, Barbara AU - Seiringer, Robert ID - 13207 IS - 4 JF - Journal of Spectral Theory SN - 1664-039X TI - Boundary superconductivity in the BCS model VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The classical infinitesimal model is a simple and robust model for the inheritance of quantitative traits. In this model, a quantitative trait is expressed as the sum of a genetic and an environmental component, and the genetic component of offspring traits within a family follows a normal distribution around the average of the parents’ trait values, and has a variance that is independent of the parental traits. In previous work, we showed that when trait values are determined by the sum of a large number of additive Mendelian factors, each of small effect, one can justify the infinitesimal model as a limit of Mendelian inheritance. In this paper, we show that this result extends to include dominance. We define the model in terms of classical quantities of quantitative genetics, before justifying it as a limit of Mendelian inheritance as the number, M, of underlying loci tends to infinity. As in the additive case, the multivariate normal distribution of trait values across the pedigree can be expressed in terms of variance components in an ancestral population and probabilities of identity by descent determined by the pedigree. Now, with just first-order dominance effects, we require two-, three-, and four-way identities. We also show that, even if we condition on parental trait values, the “shared” and “residual” components of trait values within each family will be asymptotically normally distributed as the number of loci tends to infinity, with an error of order 1/M−−√⁠. We illustrate our results with some numerical examples. AU - Barton, Nicholas H AU - Etheridge, Alison M. AU - Véber, Amandine ID - 14452 IS - 2 JF - Genetics SN - 0016-6731 TI - The infinitesimal model with dominance VL - 225 ER - TY - DATA AB - The classical infinitesimal model is a simple and robust model for the inheritance of quantitative traits. In this model, a quantitative trait is expressed as the sum of a genetic and a non-genetic (environmental) component and the genetic component of offspring traits within a family follows a normal distribution around the average of the parents’ trait values, and has a variance that is independent of the trait values of the parents. Although the trait distribution across the whole population can be far from normal, the trait distributions within families are normally distributed with a variance-covariance matrix that is determined entirely by that in the ancestral population and the probabilities of identity determined by the pedigree. Moreover, conditioning on some of the trait values within the pedigree has predictable effects on the mean and variance within and between families. In previous work, Barton et al. (2017), we showed that when trait values are determined by the sum of a large number of Mendelian factors, each of small effect, one can justify the infinitesimal model as limit of Mendelian inheritance. It was also shown that under some forms of epistasis, trait values within a family are still normally distributed. AU - Barton, Nicholas H ID - 12949 KW - Quantitative genetics KW - infinitesimal model TI - The infinitesimal model with dominance ER - TY - CONF AB - Communication-reduction techniques are a popular way to improve scalability in data-parallel training of deep neural networks (DNNs). The recent emergence of large language models such as GPT has created the need for new approaches to exploit data-parallelism. Among these, fully-sharded data parallel (FSDP) training is highly popular, yet it still encounters scalability bottlenecks. One reason is that applying compression techniques to FSDP is challenging: as the vast majority of the communication involves the model’s weights, direct compression alters convergence and leads to accuracy loss. We present QSDP, a variant of FSDP which supports both gradient and weight quantization with theoretical guarantees, is simple to implement and has essentially no overheads. To derive QSDP we prove that a natural modification of SGD achieves convergence even when we only maintain quantized weights, and thus the domain over which we train consists of quantized points and is, therefore, highly non-convex. We validate this approach by training GPT-family models with up to 1.3 billion parameters on a multi-node cluster. Experiments show that QSDP preserves model accuracy, while completely removing the communication bottlenecks of FSDP, providing end-to-end speedups of up to 2.2x. AU - Markov, Ilia AU - Vladu, Adrian AU - Guo, Qi AU - Alistarh, Dan-Adrian ID - 14461 T2 - Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Machine Learning TI - Quantized distributed training of large models with convergence guarantees VL - 202 ER - TY - CONF AB - We study fine-grained error bounds for differentially private algorithms for counting under continual observation. Our main insight is that the matrix mechanism when using lower-triangular matrices can be used in the continual observation model. More specifically, we give an explicit factorization for the counting matrix Mcount and upper bound the error explicitly. We also give a fine-grained analysis, specifying the exact constant in the upper bound. Our analysis is based on upper and lower bounds of the completely bounded norm (cb-norm) of Mcount . Along the way, we improve the best-known bound of 28 years by Mathias (SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Applications, 1993) on the cb-norm of Mcount for a large range of the dimension of Mcount. Furthermore, we are the first to give concrete error bounds for various problems under continual observation such as binary counting, maintaining a histogram, releasing an approximately cut-preserving synthetic graph, many graph-based statistics, and substring and episode counting. Finally, we note that our result can be used to get a fine-grained error bound for non-interactive local learning and the first lower bounds on the additive error for (ϵ,δ)-differentially-private counting under continual observation. Subsequent to this work, Henzinger et al. (SODA, 2023) showed that our factorization also achieves fine-grained mean-squared error. AU - Fichtenberger, Hendrik AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Upadhyay, Jalaj ID - 14462 T2 - Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Machine Learning TI - Constant matters: Fine-grained error bound on differentially private continual observation VL - 202 ER - TY - CONF AB - Autoencoders are a popular model in many branches of machine learning and lossy data compression. However, their fundamental limits, the performance of gradient methods and the features learnt during optimization remain poorly understood, even in the two-layer setting. In fact, earlier work has considered either linear autoencoders or specific training regimes (leading to vanishing or diverging compression rates). Our paper addresses this gap by focusing on non-linear two-layer autoencoders trained in the challenging proportional regime in which the input dimension scales linearly with the size of the representation. Our results characterize the minimizers of the population risk, and show that such minimizers are achieved by gradient methods; their structure is also unveiled, thus leading to a concise description of the features obtained via training. For the special case of a sign activation function, our analysis establishes the fundamental limits for the lossy compression of Gaussian sources via (shallow) autoencoders. Finally, while the results are proved for Gaussian data, numerical simulations on standard datasets display the universality of the theoretical predictions. AU - Shevchenko, Aleksandr AU - Kögler, Kevin AU - Hassani, Hamed AU - Mondelli, Marco ID - 14459 T2 - Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Machine Learning TI - Fundamental limits of two-layer autoencoders, and achieving them with gradient methods VL - 202 ER - TY - CONF AB - We provide an efficient implementation of the backpropagation algorithm, specialized to the case where the weights of the neural network being trained are sparse. Our algorithm is general, as it applies to arbitrary (unstructured) sparsity and common layer types (e.g., convolutional or linear). We provide a fast vectorized implementation on commodity CPUs, and show that it can yield speedups in end-to-end runtime experiments, both in transfer learning using already-sparsified networks, and in training sparse networks from scratch. Thus, our results provide the first support for sparse training on commodity hardware. AU - Nikdan, Mahdi AU - Pegolotti, Tommaso AU - Iofinova, Eugenia B AU - Kurtic, Eldar AU - Alistarh, Dan-Adrian ID - 14460 T2 - Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Machine Learning TI - SparseProp: Efficient sparse backpropagation for faster training of neural networks at the edge VL - 202 ER - TY - CONF AB - Threshold secret sharing allows a dealer to split a secret s into n shares, such that any t shares allow for reconstructing s, but no t-1 shares reveal any information about s. Leakage-resilient secret sharing requires that the secret remains hidden, even when an adversary additionally obtains a limited amount of leakage from every share. Benhamouda et al. (CRYPTO’18) proved that Shamir’s secret sharing scheme is one bit leakage-resilient for reconstruction threshold t≥0.85n and conjectured that the same holds for t = c.n for any constant 0≤c≤1. Nielsen and Simkin (EUROCRYPT’20) showed that this is the best one can hope for by proving that Shamir’s scheme is not secure against one-bit leakage when t0c.n/log(n). In this work, we strengthen the lower bound of Nielsen and Simkin. We consider noisy leakage-resilience, where a random subset of leakages is replaced by uniformly random noise. We prove a lower bound for Shamir’s secret sharing, similar to that of Nielsen and Simkin, which holds even when a constant fraction of leakages is replaced by random noise. To this end, we first prove a lower bound on the share size of any noisy-leakage-resilient sharing scheme. We then use this lower bound to show that there exist universal constants c1, c2, such that for sufficiently large n it holds that Shamir’s secret sharing scheme is not noisy-leakage-resilient for t≤c1.n/log(n), even when a c2 fraction of leakages are replaced by random noise. AU - Hoffmann, Charlotte AU - Simkin, Mark ID - 14457 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - 8th International Conference on Cryptology and Information Security in Latin America TI - Stronger lower bounds for leakage-resilient secret sharing VL - 14168 ER - TY - CONF AB - We show for the first time that large-scale generative pretrained transformer (GPT) family models can be pruned to at least 50% sparsity in one-shot, without any retraining, at minimal loss of accuracy. This is achieved via a new pruning method called SparseGPT, specifically designed to work efficiently and accurately on massive GPT-family models. We can execute SparseGPT on the largest available open-source models, OPT-175B and BLOOM-176B, in under 4.5 hours, and can reach 60% unstructured sparsity with negligible increase in perplexity: remarkably, more than 100 billion weights from these models can be ignored at inference time. SparseGPT generalizes to semi-structured (2:4 and 4:8) patterns, and is compatible with weight quantization approaches. The code is available at: https://github.com/IST-DASLab/sparsegpt. AU - Frantar, Elias AU - Alistarh, Dan-Adrian ID - 14458 T2 - Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Machine Learning TI - SparseGPT: Massive language models can be accurately pruned in one-shot VL - 202 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We investigate the potential of Multi-Objective, Deep Reinforcement Learning for stock and cryptocurrency single-asset trading: in particular, we consider a Multi-Objective algorithm which generalizes the reward functions and discount factor (i.e., these components are not specified a priori, but incorporated in the learning process). Firstly, using several important assets (BTCUSD, ETHUSDT, XRPUSDT, AAPL, SPY, NIFTY50), we verify the reward generalization property of the proposed Multi-Objective algorithm, and provide preliminary statistical evidence showing increased predictive stability over the corresponding Single-Objective strategy. Secondly, we show that the Multi-Objective algorithm has a clear edge over the corresponding Single-Objective strategy when the reward mechanism is sparse (i.e., when non-null feedback is infrequent over time). Finally, we discuss the generalization properties with respect to the discount factor. The entirety of our code is provided in open-source format. AU - Cornalba, Federico AU - Disselkamp, Constantin AU - Scassola, Davide AU - Helf, Christopher ID - 14451 JF - Neural Computing and Applications SN - 0941-0643 TI - Multi-objective reward generalization: improving performance of Deep Reinforcement Learning for applications in single-asset trading ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the presence of an obstacle, active particles condensate into a surface “wetting” layer due to persistent motion. If the obstacle is asymmetric, a rectification current arises in addition to wetting. Asymmetric geometries are therefore commonly used to concentrate microorganisms like bacteria and sperms. However, most studies neglect the fact that biological active matter is diverse, composed of individuals with distinct self-propulsions. Using simulations, we study a mixture of “fast” and “slow” active Brownian disks in two dimensions interacting with large half-disk obstacles. With this prototypical obstacle geometry, we analyze how the stationary collective behavior depends on the degree of self-propulsion “diversity,” defined as proportional to the difference between the self-propulsion speeds, while keeping the average self-propulsion speed fixed. A wetting layer rich in fast particles arises. The rectification current is amplified by speed diversity due to a superlinear dependence of rectification on self-propulsion speed, which arises from cooperative effects. Thus, the total rectification current cannot be obtained from an effective one-component active fluid with the same average self-propulsion speed, highlighting the importance of considering diversity in active matter. AU - Rojas Vega, Mauricio Nicolas AU - De Castro, Pablo AU - Soto, Rodrigo ID - 14442 IS - 10 JF - The European Physical Journal E SN - 1292-8941 TI - Mixtures of self-propelled particles interacting with asymmetric obstacles VL - 46 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We prove several results about substructures in Latin squares. First, we explain how to adapt our recent work on high-girth Steiner triple systems to the setting of Latin squares, resolving a conjecture of Linial that there exist Latin squares with arbitrarily high girth. As a consequence, we see that the number of order- n Latin squares with no intercalate (i.e., no 2×2 Latin subsquare) is at least (e−9/4n−o(n))n2. Equivalently, P[N=0]≥e−n2/4−o(n2)=e−(1+o(1))EN , where N is the number of intercalates in a uniformly random order- n Latin square. In fact, extending recent work of Kwan, Sah, and Sawhney, we resolve the general large-deviation problem for intercalates in random Latin squares, up to constant factors in the exponent: for any constant 0<δ≤1 we have P[N≤(1−δ)EN]=exp(−Θ(n2)) and for any constant δ>0 we have P[N≥(1+δ)EN]=exp(−Θ(n4/3logn)). Finally, as an application of some new general tools for studying substructures in random Latin squares, we show that in almost all order- n Latin squares, the number of cuboctahedra (i.e., the number of pairs of possibly degenerate 2×2 submatrices with the same arrangement of symbols) is of order n4, which is the minimum possible. As observed by Gowers and Long, this number can be interpreted as measuring ``how associative'' the quasigroup associated with the Latin square is. AU - Kwan, Matthew Alan AU - Sah, Ashwin AU - Sawhney, Mehtaab AU - Simkin, Michael ID - 14444 IS - 2 JF - Israel Journal of Mathematics SN - 0021-2172 TI - Substructures in Latin squares VL - 256 ER - TY - CONF AB - As AI and machine-learned software are used increasingly for making decisions that affect humans, it is imperative that they remain fair and unbiased in their decisions. To complement design-time bias mitigation measures, runtime verification techniques have been introduced recently to monitor the algorithmic fairness of deployed systems. Previous monitoring techniques assume full observability of the states of the (unknown) monitored system. Moreover, they can monitor only fairness properties that are specified as arithmetic expressions over the probabilities of different events. In this work, we extend fairness monitoring to systems modeled as partially observed Markov chains (POMC), and to specifications containing arithmetic expressions over the expected values of numerical functions on event sequences. The only assumptions we make are that the underlying POMC is aperiodic and starts in the stationary distribution, with a bound on its mixing time being known. These assumptions enable us to estimate a given property for the entire distribution of possible executions of the monitored POMC, by observing only a single execution. Our monitors observe a long run of the system and, after each new observation, output updated PAC-estimates of how fair or biased the system is. The monitors are computationally lightweight and, using a prototype implementation, we demonstrate their effectiveness on several real-world examples. AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Kueffner, Konstantin AU - Mallik, Kaushik ID - 14454 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - 23rd International Conference on Runtime Verification TI - Monitoring algorithmic fairness under partial observations VL - 14245 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Recent work has paid close attention to the first principle of Granger causality, according to which cause precedes effect. In this context, the question may arise whether the detected direction of causality also reverses after the time reversal of unidirectionally coupled data. Recently, it has been shown that for unidirectionally causally connected autoregressive (AR) processes X → Y, after time reversal of data, the opposite causal direction Y → X is indeed detected, although typically as part of the bidirectional X↔ Y link. As we argue here, the answer is different when the measured data are not from AR processes but from linked deterministic systems. When the goal is the usual forward data analysis, cross-mapping-like approaches correctly detect X → Y, while Granger causality-like approaches, which should not be used for deterministic time series, detect causal independence X → Y. The results of backward causal analysis depend on the predictability of the reversed data. Unlike AR processes, observables from deterministic dynamical systems, even complex nonlinear ones, can be predicted well forward, while backward predictions can be difficult (notably when the time reversal of a function leads to one-to-many relations). To address this problem, we propose an approach based on models that provide multiple candidate predictions for the target, combined with a loss function that consideres only the best candidate. The resulting good forward and backward predictability supports the view that unidirectionally causally linked deterministic dynamical systems X → Y can be expected to detect the same link both before and after time reversal. AU - Jakubík, Jozef AU - Bui Thi Mai, Phuong AU - Chvosteková, Martina AU - Krakovská, Anna ID - 14446 IS - 4 JF - Measurement Science Review TI - Against the flow of time with multi-output models VL - 23 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Importance Climate change, pollution, urbanization, socioeconomic inequality, and psychosocial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have caused massive changes in environmental conditions that affect brain health during the life span, both on a population level as well as on the level of the individual. How these environmental factors influence the brain, behavior, and mental illness is not well known. Observations A research strategy enabling population neuroscience to contribute to identify brain mechanisms underlying environment-related mental illness by leveraging innovative enrichment tools for data federation, geospatial observation, climate and pollution measures, digital health, and novel data integration techniques is described. This strategy can inform innovative treatments that target causal cognitive and molecular mechanisms of mental illness related to the environment. An example is presented of the environMENTAL Project that is leveraging federated cohort data of over 1.5 million European citizens and patients enriched with deep phenotyping data from large-scale behavioral neuroimaging cohorts to identify brain mechanisms related to environmental adversity underlying symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, and substance misuse. Conclusions and Relevance This research will lead to the development of objective biomarkers and evidence-based interventions that will significantly improve outcomes of environment-related mental illness. AU - Schumann, Gunter AU - Andreassen, Ole A. AU - Banaschewski, Tobias AU - Calhoun, Vince D. AU - Clinton, Nicholas AU - Desrivieres, Sylvane AU - Brandlistuen, Ragnhild Eek AU - Feng, Jianfeng AU - Hese, Soeren AU - Hitchen, Esther AU - Hoffmann, Per AU - Jia, Tianye AU - Jirsa, Viktor AU - Marquand, Andre F. AU - Nees, Frauke AU - Nöthen, Markus M. AU - Novarino, Gaia AU - Polemiti, Elli AU - Ralser, Markus AU - Rapp, Michael AU - Schepanski, Kerstin AU - Schikowski, Tamara AU - Slater, Mel AU - Sommer, Peter AU - Stahl, Bernd Carsten AU - Thompson, Paul M. AU - Twardziok, Sven AU - Van Der Meer, Dennis AU - Walter, Henrik AU - Westlye, Lars ID - 14443 IS - 10 JF - JAMA Psychiatry TI - Addressing global environmental challenges to mental health using population neuroscience: A review VL - 80 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We study the Fröhlich polaron model in R3, and establish the subleading term in the strong coupling asymptotics of its ground state energy, corresponding to the quantum corrections to the classical energy determined by the Pekar approximation. AU - Brooks, Morris AU - Seiringer, Robert ID - 14441 JF - Communications in Mathematical Physics SN - 0010-3616 TI - The Fröhlich Polaron at strong coupling: Part I - The quantum correction to the classical energy VL - 404 ER - TY - CONF AB - We consider the problem of solving LP relaxations of MAP-MRF inference problems, and in particular the method proposed recently in [16], [35]. As a key computational subroutine, it uses a variant of the Frank-Wolfe (FW) method to minimize a smooth convex function over a combinatorial polytope. We propose an efficient implementation of this subroutine based on in-face Frank-Wolfe directions, introduced in [4] in a different context. More generally, we define an abstract data structure for a combinatorial subproblem that enables in-face FW directions, and describe its specialization for tree-structured MAP-MRF inference subproblems. Experimental results indicate that the resulting method is the current state-of-art LP solver for some classes of problems. Our code is available at pub.ist.ac.at/~vnk/papers/IN-FACE-FW.html. AU - Kolmogorov, Vladimir ID - 14448 SN - 1063-6919 T2 - Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition TI - Solving relaxations of MAP-MRF problems: Combinatorial in-face Frank-Wolfe directions VL - 2023 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cytosine methylation within CG dinucleotides (mCG) can be epigenetically inherited over many generations. Such inheritance is thought to be mediated by a semiconservative mechanism that produces binary present/absent methylation patterns. However, we show here that in Arabidopsis thaliana h1ddm1 mutants, intermediate heterochromatic mCG is stably inherited across many generations and is quantitatively associated with transposon expression. We develop a mathematical model that estimates the rates of semiconservative maintenance failure and de novo methylation at each transposon, demonstrating that mCG can be stably inherited at any level via a dynamic balance of these activities. We find that DRM2 – the core methyltransferase of the RNA-directed DNA methylation pathway – catalyzes most of the heterochromatic de novo mCG, with de novo rates orders of magnitude higher than previously thought, whereas chromomethylases make smaller contributions. Our results demonstrate that stable epigenetic inheritance of mCG in plant heterochromatin is enabled by extensive de novo methylation. AU - Lyons, David B. AU - Briffa, Amy AU - He, Shengbo AU - Choi, Jaemyung AU - Hollwey, Elizabeth AU - Colicchio, Jack AU - Anderson, Ian AU - Feng, Xiaoqi AU - Howard, Martin AU - Zilberman, Daniel ID - 12672 IS - 3 JF - Cell Reports TI - Extensive de novo activity stabilizes epigenetic inheritance of CG methylation in Arabidopsis transposons VL - 42 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider the large polaron described by the Fröhlich Hamiltonian and study its energy-momentum relation defined as the lowest possible energy as a function of the total momentum. Using a suitable family of trial states, we derive an optimal parabolic upper bound for the energy-momentum relation in the limit of strong coupling. The upper bound consists of a momentum independent term that agrees with the predicted two-term expansion for the ground state energy of the strongly coupled polaron at rest and a term that is quadratic in the momentum with coefficient given by the inverse of twice the classical effective mass introduced by Landau and Pekar. AU - Mitrouskas, David Johannes AU - Mysliwy, Krzysztof AU - Seiringer, Robert ID - 13178 JF - Forum of Mathematics TI - Optimal parabolic upper bound for the energy-momentum relation of a strongly coupled polaron VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Intercellular signaling molecules, known as morphogens, act at a long range in developing tissues to provide spatial information and control properties such as cell fate and tissue growth. The production, transport, and removal of morphogens shape their concentration profiles in time and space. Downstream signaling cascades and gene regulatory networks within cells then convert the spatiotemporal morphogen profiles into distinct cellular responses. Current challenges are to understand the diverse molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying morphogen gradient formation, as well as the logic of downstream regulatory circuits involved in morphogen interpretation. This knowledge, combining experimental and theoretical results, is essential to understand emerging properties of morphogen-controlled systems, such as robustness and scaling. AU - Kicheva, Anna AU - Briscoe, James ID - 14484 JF - Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology SN - 1081-0706 TI - Control of tissue development by morphogens VL - 39 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Portrait viewpoint and illumination editing is an important problem with several applications in VR/AR, movies, and photography. Comprehensive knowledge of geometry and illumination is critical for obtaining photorealistic results. Current methods are unable to explicitly model in 3D while handling both viewpoint and illumination editing from a single image. In this paper, we propose VoRF, a novel approach that can take even a single portrait image as input and relight human heads under novel illuminations that can be viewed from arbitrary viewpoints. VoRF represents a human head as a continuous volumetric field and learns a prior model of human heads using a coordinate-based MLP with individual latent spaces for identity and illumination. The prior model is learned in an auto-decoder manner over a diverse class of head shapes and appearances, allowing VoRF to generalize to novel test identities from a single input image. Additionally, VoRF has a reflectance MLP that uses the intermediate features of the prior model for rendering One-Light-at-A-Time (OLAT) images under novel views. We synthesize novel illuminations by combining these OLAT images with target environment maps. Qualitative and quantitative evaluations demonstrate the effectiveness of VoRF for relighting and novel view synthesis, even when applied to unseen subjects under uncontrolled illumination. This work is an extension of Rao et al. (VoRF: Volumetric Relightable Faces 2022). We provide extensive evaluation and ablative studies of our model and also provide an application, where any face can be relighted using textual input. AU - Rao, Pramod AU - Mallikarjun, B. R. AU - Fox, Gereon AU - Weyrich, Tim AU - Bickel, Bernd AU - Pfister, Hanspeter AU - Matusik, Wojciech AU - Zhan, Fangneng AU - Tewari, Ayush AU - Theobalt, Christian AU - Elgharib, Mohamed ID - 14488 JF - International Journal of Computer Vision SN - 0920-5691 TI - A deeper analysis of volumetric relightiable faces ER - TY - JOUR AB - High Mountain Asia (HMA) is among the most vulnerable water towers globally and yet future projections of water availability in and from its high-mountain catchments remain uncertain, as their hydrologic response to ongoing environmental changes is complex. Mechanistic modeling approaches incorporating cryospheric, hydrological, and vegetation processes in high spatial, temporal, and physical detail have never been applied for high-elevation catchments of HMA. We use a land surface model at high spatial and temporal resolution (100 m and hourly) to simulate the coupled dynamics of energy, water, and vegetation for the 350 km2 Langtang catchment (Nepal). We compare our model outputs for one hydrological year against a large set of observations to gain insight into the partitioning of the water balance at the subseasonal scale and across elevation bands. During the simulated hydrological year, we find that evapotranspiration is a key component of the total water balance, as it causes about the equivalent of 20% of all the available precipitation or 154% of the water production from glacier melt in the basin to return directly to the atmosphere. The depletion of the cryospheric water budget is dominated by snow melt, but at high elevations is primarily dictated by snow and ice sublimation. Snow sublimation is the dominant vapor flux (49%) at the catchment scale, accounting for the equivalent of 11% of snowfall, 17% of snowmelt, and 75% of ice melt, respectively. We conclude that simulations should consider sublimation and other evaporative fluxes explicitly, as otherwise water balance estimates can be ill-quantified. AU - Buri, Pascal AU - Fatichi, Simone AU - Shaw, Thomas AU - Miles, Evan S. AU - Mccarthy, Michael AU - Fyffe, Catriona Louise AU - Fugger, Stefan AU - Ren, Shaoting AU - Kneib, Marin AU - Jouberton, Achille AU - Steiner, Jakob AU - Fujita, Koji AU - Pellicciotti, Francesca ID - 14487 IS - 10 JF - Water Resources Research SN - 0043-1397 TI - Land surface modeling in the Himalayas: On the importance of evaporative fluxes for the water balance of a high-elevation catchment VL - 59 ER - TY - CONF AB - Batching is a technique that stores multiple keys/values in each node of a data structure. In sequential search data structures, batching reduces latency by reducing the number of cache misses and shortening the chain of pointers to dereference. Applying batching to concurrent data structures is challenging, because it is difficult to maintain the search property and keep contention low in the presence of batching. In this paper, we present a general methodology for leveraging batching in concurrent search data structures, called BatchBoost. BatchBoost builds a search data structure from distinct "data" and "index" layers. The data layer’s purpose is to store a batch of key/value pairs in each of its nodes. The index layer uses an unmodified concurrent search data structure to route operations to a position in the data layer that is "close" to where the corresponding key should exist. The requirements on the index and data layers are low: with minimal effort, we were able to compose three highly scalable concurrent search data structures based on three original data structures as the index layers with a batched version of the Lazy List as the data layer. The resulting BatchBoost data structures provide significant performance improvements over their original counterparts. AU - Aksenov, Vitaly AU - Anoprenko, Michael AU - Fedorov, Alexander AU - Spear, Michael ID - 14485 SN - 1868-8969 T2 - 37th International Symposium on Distributed Computing TI - Brief announcement: BatchBoost: Universal batching for concurrent data structures VL - 281 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We present a minimal model of ferroelectric large polarons, which are suggested as one of the mechanisms responsible for the unique charge transport properties of hybrid perovskites. We demonstrate that short-ranged charge–rotor interactions lead to long-range ferroelectric ordering of rotors, which strongly affects the carrier mobility. In the nonperturbative regime, where our theory cannot be reduced to any of the earlier models, we reveal that the polaron is characterized by large coherence length and a roughly tenfold increase of the effective mass as compared to the bare mass. These results are in good agreement with other theoretical predictions for ferroelectric polarons. Our model establishes a general phenomenological framework for ferroelectric polarons providing the starting point for future studies of their role in the transport properties of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites. AU - Koutentakis, Georgios AU - Ghazaryan, Areg AU - Lemeshko, Mikhail ID - 14486 IS - 4 JF - Physical Review Research SN - 2643-1564 TI - Rotor lattice model of ferroelectric large polarons VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR AB - To respond to auxin, the chief orchestrator of their multicellularity, plants evolved multiple receptor systems and signal transduction cascades. Despite decades of research, however, we are still lacking a satisfactory synthesis of various auxin signaling mechanisms. The chief discrepancy and historical controversy of the field is that of rapid and slow auxin effects on plant physiology and development. How is it possible that ions begin to trickle across the plasma membrane as soon as auxin enters the cell, even though the best-characterized transcriptional auxin pathway can take effect only after tens of minutes? Recently, unexpected progress has been made in understanding this and other unknowns of auxin signaling. We provide a perspective on these exciting developments and concepts whose general applicability might have ramifications beyond auxin signaling. AU - Fiedler, Lukas AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 14313 IS - 10 JF - Current Opinion in Plant Biology SN - 1369-5266 TI - Rapid auxin signaling: Unknowns old and new VL - 75 ER - TY - GEN AB - We provide i) gridded initial conditions (.tif), ii) modeled gridded monthly outputs (.tif), and iii) modeled hourly outputs at the station locations (.txt) for the hydrological year 2019. Information about the variables and units can be found in the figures (.png) associated to each dataset. Details about the datasets can be found in the original publication by Buri and others (2023). Buri, P., Fatichi, S., Shaw, T. E., Miles, E. S., McCarthy, M. J., Fyffe, C. L., ... & Pellicciotti, F. (2023). Land Surface Modeling in the Himalayas: On the Importance of Evaporative Fluxes for the Water Balance of a High‐Elevation Catchment. Water Resources Research, 59(10), e2022WR033841. DOI: 10.1029/2022WR033841 AU - Buri, Pascal AU - Fatichi, Simone AU - Shaw, Thomas AU - Miles, Evan AU - McCarthy, Michael AU - Fyffe, Catriona Louise AU - Fugger, Stefan AU - Ren, Shaoting AU - Kneib, Marin AU - Jouberton, Achille AU - Steiner, Jakob AU - Fujita, Koji AU - Pellicciotti, Francesca ID - 14494 TI - Model output data to "Land surface modeling in the Himalayas: on the importance of evaporative fluxes for the water balance of a high elevation catchment" ER - TY - JOUR AB - An n-vertex graph is called C-Ramsey if it has no clique or independent set of size Clog2n (i.e., if it has near-optimal Ramsey behavior). In this paper, we study edge statistics in Ramsey graphs, in particular obtaining very precise control of the distribution of the number of edges in a random vertex subset of a C-Ramsey graph. This brings together two ongoing lines of research: the study of ‘random-like’ properties of Ramsey graphs and the study of small-ball probability for low-degree polynomials of independent random variables. The proof proceeds via an ‘additive structure’ dichotomy on the degree sequence and involves a wide range of different tools from Fourier analysis, random matrix theory, the theory of Boolean functions, probabilistic combinatorics and low-rank approximation. In particular, a key ingredient is a new sharpened version of the quadratic Carbery–Wright theorem on small-ball probability for polynomials of Gaussians, which we believe is of independent interest. One of the consequences of our result is the resolution of an old conjecture of Erdős and McKay, for which Erdős reiterated in several of his open problem collections and for which he offered one of his notorious monetary prizes. AU - Kwan, Matthew Alan AU - Sah, Ashwin AU - Sauermann, Lisa AU - Sawhney, Mehtaab ID - 14499 JF - Forum of Mathematics, Pi KW - Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics KW - Geometry and Topology KW - Mathematical Physics KW - Statistics and Probability KW - Algebra and Number Theory KW - Analysis SN - 2050-5086 TI - Anticoncentration in Ramsey graphs and a proof of the Erdős–McKay conjecture VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In nature, proteins that switch between two conformations in response to environmental stimuli structurally transduce biochemical information in a manner analogous to how transistors control information flow in computing devices. Designing proteins with two distinct but fully structured conformations is a challenge for protein design as it requires sculpting an energy landscape with two distinct minima. Here we describe the design of “hinge” proteins that populate one designed state in the absence of ligand and a second designed state in the presence of ligand. X-ray crystallography, electron microscopy, double electron-electron resonance spectroscopy, and binding measurements demonstrate that despite the significant structural differences the two states are designed with atomic level accuracy and that the conformational and binding equilibria are closely coupled. AU - Praetorius, Florian M AU - Leung, Philip J. Y. AU - Tessmer, Maxx H. AU - Broerman, Adam AU - Demakis, Cullen AU - Dishman, Acacia F. AU - Pillai, Arvind AU - Idris, Abbas AU - Juergens, David AU - Dauparas, Justas AU - Li, Xinting AU - Levine, Paul M. AU - Lamb, Mila AU - Ballard, Ryanne K. AU - Gerben, Stacey R. AU - Nguyen, Hannah AU - Kang, Alex AU - Sankaran, Banumathi AU - Bera, Asim K. AU - Volkman, Brian F. AU - Nivala, Jeff AU - Stoll, Stefan AU - Baker, David ID - 14281 IS - 6659 JF - Science SN - 0036-8075 TI - Design of stimulus-responsive two-state hinge proteins VL - 381 ER - TY - GEN AB - Growth factors and cytokines signal by binding to the extracellular domains of their receptors and drive association and transphosphorylation of the receptor intracellular tyrosine kinase domains, initiating downstream signaling cascades. To enable systematic exploration of how receptor valency and geometry affects signaling outcomes, we designed cyclic homo-oligomers with up to 8 subunits using repeat protein building blocks that can be modularly extended. By incorporating a de novo designed fibroblast growth-factor receptor (FGFR) binding module into these scaffolds, we generated a series of synthetic signaling ligands that exhibit potent valency- and geometry-dependent Ca2+ release and MAPK pathway activation. The high specificity of the designed agonists reveal distinct roles for two FGFR splice variants in driving endothelial and mesenchymal cell fates during early vascular development. The ability to incorporate receptor binding domains and repeat extensions in a modular fashion makes our designed scaffolds broadly useful for probing and manipulating cellular signaling pathways. AU - Edman, Natasha I AU - Redler, Rachel L AU - Phal, Ashish AU - Schlichthaerle, Thomas AU - Srivatsan, Sanjay R AU - Etemadi, Ali AU - An, Seong AU - Favor, Andrew AU - Ehnes, Devon AU - Li, Zhe AU - Praetorius, Florian M AU - Gordon, Max AU - Yang, Wei AU - Coventry, Brian AU - Hicks, Derrick R AU - Cao, Longxing AU - Bethel, Neville AU - Heine, Piper AU - Murray, Analisa N AU - Gerben, Stacey AU - Carter, Lauren AU - Miranda, Marcos AU - Negahdari, Babak AU - Lee, Sangwon AU - Trapnell, Cole AU - Stewart, Lance AU - Ekiert, Damian C AU - Schlessinger, Joseph AU - Shendure, Jay AU - Bhabha, Gira AU - Ruohola-Baker, Hannele AU - Baker, David ID - 14294 T2 - bioRxiv TI - Modulation of FGF pathway signaling and vascular differentiation using designed oligomeric assemblies ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cold atomic gases have become a paradigmatic system for exploring fundamental physics, which at the same time allows for applications in quantum technologies. The accelerating developments in the field have led to a highly advanced set of engineering techniques that, for example, can tune interactions, shape the external geometry, select among a large set of atomic species with different properties, or control the number of atoms. In particular, it is possible to operate in lower dimensions and drive atomic systems into the strongly correlated regime. In this review, we discuss recent advances in few-body cold atom systems confined in low dimensions from a theoretical viewpoint. We mainly focus on bosonic systems in one dimension and provide an introduction to the static properties before we review the state-of-the-art research into quantum dynamical processes stimulated by the presence of correlations. Besides discussing the fundamental physical phenomena arising in these systems, we also provide an overview of the calculational and numerical tools and methods that are commonly used, thus delivering a balanced and comprehensive overview of the field. We conclude by giving an outlook on possible future directions that are interesting to explore in these correlated systems. AU - Mistakidis, S. I. AU - Volosniev, Artem AU - Barfknecht, R. E. AU - Fogarty, T. AU - Busch, Th AU - Foerster, A. AU - Schmelcher, P. AU - Zinner, N. T. ID - 14513 JF - Physics Reports SN - 0370-1573 TI - Few-body Bose gases in low dimensions - A laboratory for quantum dynamics VL - 1042 ER - TY - DATA AB - We introduce a stochastic cellular automaton as a model for culture and border formation. The model can be conceptualized as a game where the expansion rate of cultures is quantified in terms of their area and perimeter in such a way that approximately round cultures get a competitive advantage. We first analyse the model with periodic boundary conditions, where we study how the model can end up in a fixed state, i.e. freezes. Then we implement the model on the European geography with mountains and rivers. We see how the model reproduces some qualitative features of European culture formation, namely that rivers and mountains are more frequently borders between cultures, mountainous regions tend to have higher cultural diversity and the central European plain has less clear cultural borders. AU - Klausen, Frederik Ravn AU - Lauritsen, Asbjørn Bækgaard ID - 12869 TI - Research data for: A stochastic cellular automaton model of culture formation ER - TY - JOUR AB - We introduce a stochastic cellular automaton as a model for culture and border formation. The model can be conceptualized as a game where the expansion rate of cultures is quantified in terms of their area and perimeter in such a way that approximately geometrically round cultures get a competitive advantage. We first analyze the model with periodic boundary conditions, where we study how the model can end up in a fixed state, i.e., freezes. Then we implement the model on the European geography with mountains and rivers. We see how the model reproduces some qualitative features of European culture formation, namely, that rivers and mountains are more frequently borders between cultures, mountainous regions tend to have higher cultural diversity, and the central European plain has less clear cultural borders. AU - Klausen, Frederik Ravn AU - Lauritsen, Asbjørn Bækgaard ID - 12890 IS - 5 JF - Physical Review E SN - 2470-0045 TI - Stochastic cellular automaton model of culture formation VL - 108 ER - TY - CONF AB - We revisit decentralized random beacons with a focus on practical distributed applications. Decentralized random beacons (Beaver and So, Eurocrypt'93) provide the functionality for n parties to generate an unpredictable sequence of bits in a way that cannot be biased, which is useful for any decentralized protocol requiring trusted randomness. Existing beacon constructions are highly inefficient in practical settings where protocol parties need to rejoin after crashes or disconnections, and more significantly where smart contracts may rely on arbitrary index points in high-volume streams. For this, we introduce a new notion of history-generating decentralized random beacons (HGDRBs). Roughly, the history-generation property of HGDRBs allows for previous beacon outputs to be efficiently generated knowing only the current value and the public key. At application layers, history-generation supports registering a sparser set of on-chain values if desired, so that apps like lotteries can utilize on-chain values without incurring high-frequency costs, enjoying all the benefits of DRBs implemented off-chain or with decoupled, special-purpose chains. Unlike rollups, HG is tailored specifically to recovering and verifying pseudorandom bit sequences and thus enjoys unique optimizations investigated in this work. We introduce STROBE: an efficient HGDRB construction which generalizes the original squaring-based RSA approach of Beaver and So. STROBE enjoys several useful properties that make it suited for practical applications that use beacons: 1) history-generating: it can regenerate and verify high-throughput beacon streams, supporting sparse (thus cost-effective) ledger entries; 2) concisely self-verifying: NIZK-free, with state and validation employing a single ring element; 3) eco-friendly: stake-based rather than work based; 4) unbounded: refresh-free, addressing limitations of Beaver and So; 5) delay-free: results are immediately available. 6) storage-efficient: the last beacon suffices to derive all past outputs, thus O(1) storage requirements for nodes serving the whole history. AU - Beaver, Donald AU - Kelkar, Mahimna AU - Lewi, Kevin AU - Nikolaenko, Valeria AU - Sonnino, Alberto AU - Chalkias, Konstantinos AU - Kokoris Kogias, Eleftherios AU - Naurois, Ladi De AU - Roy, Arnab ID - 14516 SN - 1868-8969 T2 - 5th Conference on Advances in Financial Technologies TI - STROBE: Streaming Threshold Random Beacons VL - 282 ER - TY - JOUR AB - State-of-the-art transmon qubits rely on large capacitors, which systematically improve their coherence due to reduced surface-loss participation. However, this approach increases both the footprint and the parasitic cross-coupling and is ultimately limited by radiation losses—a potential roadblock for scaling up quantum processors to millions of qubits. In this work we present transmon qubits with sizes as low as 36 × 39 µm2 with 100-nm-wide vacuum-gap capacitors that are micromachined from commercial silicon-on-insulator wafers and shadow evaporated with aluminum. We achieve a vacuum participation ratio up to 99.6% in an in-plane design that is compatible with standard coplanar circuits. Qubit relaxationtime measurements for small gaps with high zero-point electric field variance of up to 22 V/m reveal a double exponential decay indicating comparably strong qubit interaction with long-lived two-level systems. The exceptionally high selectivity of up to 20 dB to the superconductor-vacuum interface allows us to precisely back out the sub-single-photon dielectric loss tangent of aluminum oxide previously exposed to ambient conditions. In terms of future scaling potential, we achieve a ratio of qubit quality factor to a footprint area equal to 20 µm−2, which is comparable with the highest T1 devices relying on larger geometries, a value that could improve substantially for lower surface-loss superconductors. AU - Zemlicka, Martin AU - Redchenko, Elena AU - Peruzzo, Matilda AU - Hassani, Farid AU - Trioni, Andrea AU - Barzanjeh, Shabir AU - Fink, Johannes M ID - 14517 IS - 4 JF - Physical Review Applied TI - Compact vacuum-gap transmon qubits: Selective and sensitive probes for superconductor surface losses VL - 20 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Most natural and engineered information-processing systems transmit information via signals that vary in time. Computing the information transmission rate or the information encoded in the temporal characteristics of these signals requires the mutual information between the input and output signals as a function of time, i.e., between the input and output trajectories. Yet, this is notoriously difficult because of the high-dimensional nature of the trajectory space, and all existing techniques require approximations. We present an exact Monte Carlo technique called path weight sampling (PWS) that, for the first time, makes it possible to compute the mutual information between input and output trajectories for any stochastic system that is described by a master equation. The principal idea is to use the master equation to evaluate the exact conditional probability of an individual output trajectory for a given input trajectory and average this via Monte Carlo sampling in trajectory space to obtain the mutual information. We present three variants of PWS, which all generate the trajectories using the standard stochastic simulation algorithm. While direct PWS is a brute-force method, Rosenbluth-Rosenbluth PWS exploits the analogy between signal trajectory sampling and polymer sampling, and thermodynamic integration PWS is based on a reversible work calculation in trajectory space. PWS also makes it possible to compute the mutual information between input and output trajectories for systems with hidden internal states as well as systems with feedback from output to input. Applying PWS to the bacterial chemotaxis system, consisting of 182 coupled chemical reactions, demonstrates not only that the scheme is highly efficient but also that the number of receptor clusters is much smaller than hitherto believed, while their size is much larger. AU - Reinhardt, Manuel AU - Tkačik, Gašper AU - Ten Wolde, Pieter Rein ID - 14515 IS - 4 JF - Physical Review X TI - Path weight sampling: Exact Monte Carlo computation of the mutual information between stochastic trajectories VL - 13 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The elastic Leidenfrost effect occurs when a vaporizable soft solid is lowered onto a hot surface. Evaporative flow couples to elastic deformation, giving spontaneous bouncing or steady-state floating. The effect embodies an unexplored interplay between thermodynamics, elasticity, and lubrication: despite being observed, its basic theoretical description remains a challenge. Here, we provide a theory of elastic Leidenfrost floating. As weight increases, a rigid solid sits closer to the hot surface. By contrast, we discover an elasticity-dominated regime where the heavier the solid, the higher it floats. This geometry-governed behavior is reminiscent of the dynamics of large liquid Leidenfrost drops. We show that this elastic regime is characterized by Hertzian behavior of the solid’s underbelly and derive how the float height scales with materials parameters. Introducing a dimensionless elastic Leidenfrost number, we capture the crossover between rigid and Hertzian behavior. Our results provide theoretical underpinning for recent experiments, and point to the design of novel soft machines. AU - Binysh, Jack AU - Chakraborty, Indrajit AU - Chubynsky, Mykyta V. AU - Diaz Melian, Vicente L AU - Waitukaitis, Scott R AU - Sprittles, James E. AU - Souslov, Anton ID - 14514 IS - 16 JF - Physical Review Letters SN - 0031-9007 TI - Modeling Leidenfrost levitation of soft elastic solids VL - 131 ER - TY - GEN AB - see Readme file AU - Binysh, Jack AU - Chakraborty, Indrajit AU - Chubynsky, Mykyta AU - Diaz Melian, Vicente L AU - Waitukaitis, Scott R AU - Sprittles, James AU - Souslov, Anton ID - 14523 TI - SouslovLab/PRL2023-ModellingLeidenfrostLevitationofSoftElasticSolids: v1.0.1 ER - TY - CONF AB - We consider bidding games, a class of two-player zero-sum graph games. The game proceeds as follows. Both players have bounded budgets. A token is placed on a vertex of a graph, in each turn the players simultaneously submit bids, and the higher bidder moves the token, where we break bidding ties in favor of Player 1. Player 1 wins the game iff the token visits a designated target vertex. We consider, for the first time, poorman discrete-bidding in which the granularity of the bids is restricted and the higher bid is paid to the bank. Previous work either did not impose granularity restrictions or considered Richman bidding (bids are paid to the opponent). While the latter mechanisms are technically more accessible, the former is more appealing from a practical standpoint. Our study focuses on threshold budgets, which is the necessary and sufficient initial budget required for Player 1 to ensure winning against a given Player 2 budget. We first show existence of thresholds. In DAGs, we show that threshold budgets can be approximated with error bounds by thresholds under continuous-bidding and that they exhibit a periodic behavior. We identify closed-form solutions in special cases. We implement and experiment with an algorithm to find threshold budgets. AU - Avni, Guy AU - Meggendorfer, Tobias AU - Sadhukhan, Suman AU - Tkadlec, Josef AU - Zikelic, Dorde ID - 14518 SN - 0922-6389 T2 - Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications TI - Reachability poorman discrete-bidding games VL - 372 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Eukaryotic cells can undergo different forms of programmed cell death, many of which culminate in plasma membrane rupture as the defining terminal event1,2,3,4,5,6,7. Plasma membrane rupture was long thought to be driven by osmotic pressure, but it has recently been shown to be in many cases an active process, mediated by the protein ninjurin-18 (NINJ1). Here we resolve the structure of NINJ1 and the mechanism by which it ruptures membranes. Super-resolution microscopy reveals that NINJ1 clusters into structurally diverse assemblies in the membranes of dying cells, in particular large, filamentous assemblies with branched morphology. A cryo-electron microscopy structure of NINJ1 filaments shows a tightly packed fence-like array of transmembrane α-helices. Filament directionality and stability is defined by two amphipathic α-helices that interlink adjacent filament subunits. The NINJ1 filament features a hydrophilic side and a hydrophobic side, and molecular dynamics simulations show that it can stably cap membrane edges. The function of the resulting supramolecular arrangement was validated by site-directed mutagenesis. Our data thus suggest that, during lytic cell death, the extracellular α-helices of NINJ1 insert into the plasma membrane to polymerize NINJ1 monomers into amphipathic filaments that rupture the plasma membrane. The membrane protein NINJ1 is therefore an interactive component of the eukaryotic cell membrane that functions as an in-built breaking point in response to activation of cell death. AU - Degen, Morris AU - Santos, José Carlos AU - Pluhackova, Kristyna AU - Cebrero, Gonzalo AU - Ramos, Saray AU - Jankevicius, Gytis AU - Hartenian, Ella AU - Guillerm, Undina AU - Mari, Stefania A. AU - Kohl, Bastian AU - Müller, Daniel J. AU - Schanda, Paul AU - Maier, Timm AU - Perez, Camilo AU - Sieben, Christian AU - Broz, Petr AU - Hiller, Sebastian ID - 13096 JF - Nature SN - 0028-0836 TI - Structural basis of NINJ1-mediated plasma membrane rupture in cell death VL - 618 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A series of triarylamines was synthesised and screened for their suitability as catholytes in redox flow batteries using cyclic voltammetry (CV). Tris(4-aminophenyl)amine was found to be the strongest candidate. Solubility and initial electrochemical performance were promising; however, polymerisation was observed during electrochemical cycling leading to rapid capacity fade prescribed to a loss of accessible active material and the limitation of ion transport processes within the cell. A mixed electrolyte system of H3PO4 and HCl was found to inhibit polymerisation producing oligomers that consumed less active material reducing rates of degradation in the redox flow battery. Under these conditions Coulombic efficiency improved by over 4 %, the maximum number of cycles more than quadrupled and an additional theoretical capacity of 20 % was accessed. This paper is, to our knowledge, the first example of triarylamines as catholytes in all-aqueous redox flow batteries and emphasises the impact supporting electrolytes can have on electrochemical performance. AU - Farag, Nadia L. AU - Jethwa, Rajesh B AU - Beardmore, Alice E. AU - Insinna, Teresa AU - O'Keefe, Christopher A. AU - Klusener, Peter A.A. AU - Grey, Clare P. AU - Wright, Dominic S. ID - 13041 IS - 13 JF - ChemSusChem SN - 1864-5631 TI - Triarylamines as catholytes in aqueous organic redox flow batteries VL - 16 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Under high pressures and temperatures, molecular systems with substantial polarization charges, such as ammonia and water, are predicted to form superionic phases and dense fluid states with dissociating molecules and high electrical conductivity. This behaviour potentially plays a role in explaining the origin of the multipolar magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune, whose mantles are thought to result from a mixture of H2O, NH3 and CH4 ices. Determining the stability domain, melting curve and electrical conductivity of these superionic phases is therefore crucial for modelling planetary interiors and dynamos. Here we report the melting curve of superionic ammonia up to 300 GPa from laser-driven shock compression of pre-compressed samples and atomistic calculations. We show that ammonia melts at lower temperatures than water above 100 GPa and that fluid ammonia’s electrical conductivity exceeds that of water at conditions predicted by hot, super-adiabatic models for Uranus and Neptune, and enhances the conductivity in their fluid water-rich dynamo layers. AU - Hernandez, J.-A. AU - Bethkenhagen, Mandy AU - Ninet, S. AU - French, M. AU - Benuzzi-Mounaix, A. AU - Datchi, F. AU - Guarguaglini, M. AU - Lefevre, F. AU - Occelli, F. AU - Redmer, R. AU - Vinci, T. AU - Ravasio, A. ID - 13118 JF - Nature Physics SN - 1745-2473 TI - Melting curve of superionic ammonia at planetary interior conditions VL - 19 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A density wave (DW) is a fundamental type of long-range order in quantum matter tied to self-organization into a crystalline structure. The interplay of DW order with superfluidity can lead to complex scenarios that pose a great challenge to theoretical analysis. In the past decades, tunable quantum Fermi gases have served as model systems for exploring the physics of strongly interacting fermions, including most notably magnetic ordering1, pairing and superfluidity2, and the crossover from a Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer superfluid to a Bose–Einstein condensate3. Here, we realize a Fermi gas featuring both strong, tunable contact interactions and photon-mediated, spatially structured long-range interactions in a transversely driven high-finesse optical cavity. Above a critical long-range interaction strength, DW order is stabilized in the system, which we identify via its superradiant light-scattering properties. We quantitatively measure the variation of the onset of DW order as the contact interaction is varied across the Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer superfluid and Bose–Einstein condensate crossover, in qualitative agreement with a mean-field theory. The atomic DW susceptibility varies over an order of magnitude upon tuning the strength and the sign of the long-range interactions below the self-ordering threshold, demonstrating independent and simultaneous control over the contact and long-range interactions. Therefore, our experimental setup provides a fully tunable and microscopically controllable platform for the experimental study of the interplay of superfluidity and DW order. AU - Helson, Victor AU - Zwettler, Timo AU - Mivehvar, Farokh AU - Colella, Elvia AU - Roux, Kevin Etienne Robert AU - Konishi, Hideki AU - Ritsch, Helmut AU - Brantut, Jean Philippe ID - 13119 JF - Nature SN - 0028-0836 TI - Density-wave ordering in a unitary Fermi gas with photon-mediated interactions VL - 618 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This paper establishes new connections between many-body quantum systems, One-body Reduced Density Matrices Functional Theory (1RDMFT) and Optimal Transport (OT), by interpreting the problem of computing the ground-state energy of a finite-dimensional composite quantum system at positive temperature as a non-commutative entropy regularized Optimal Transport problem. We develop a new approach to fully characterize the dual-primal solutions in such non-commutative setting. The mathematical formalism is particularly relevant in quantum chemistry: numerical realizations of the many-electron ground-state energy can be computed via a non-commutative version of Sinkhorn algorithm. Our approach allows to prove convergence and robustness of this algorithm, which, to our best knowledge, were unknown even in the two marginal case. Our methods are based on a priori estimates in the dual problem, which we believe to be of independent interest. Finally, the above results are extended in 1RDMFT setting, where bosonic or fermionic symmetry conditions are enforced on the problem. AU - Feliciangeli, Dario AU - Gerolin, Augusto AU - Portinale, Lorenzo ID - 12911 IS - 4 JF - Journal of Functional Analysis SN - 0022-1236 TI - A non-commutative entropic optimal transport approach to quantum composite systems at positive temperature VL - 285 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this note we study the eigenvalue growth of infinite graphs with discrete spectrum. We assume that the corresponding Dirichlet forms satisfy certain Sobolev-type inequalities and that the total measure is finite. In this sense, the associated operators on these graphs display similarities to elliptic operators on bounded domains in the continuum. Specifically, we prove lower bounds on the eigenvalue growth and show by examples that corresponding upper bounds cannot be established. AU - Hua, Bobo AU - Keller, Matthias AU - Schwarz, Michael AU - Wirth, Melchior ID - 13177 IS - 8 JF - Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society SN - 0002-9939 TI - Sobolev-type inequalities and eigenvalue growth on graphs with finite measure VL - 151 ER - TY - JOUR AB - n the dynamic minimum set cover problem, the challenge is to minimize the update time while guaranteeing a close-to-optimal min{O(log n), f} approximation factor. (Throughout, n, m, f , and C are parameters denoting the maximum number of elements, the number of sets, the frequency, and the cost range.) In the high-frequency range, when f = Ω(log n) , this was achieved by a deterministic O(log n) -approximation algorithm with O(f log n) amortized update time by Gupta et al. [Online and dynamic algorithms for set cover, in Proceedings STOC 2017, ACM, pp. 537–550]. In this paper we consider the low-frequency range, when f = O(log n) , and obtain deterministic algorithms with a (1 + ∈)f -approximation ratio and the following guarantees on the update time. (1) O ((f/∈)-log(Cn)) amortized update time: Prior to our work, the best approximation ratio guaranteed by deterministic algorithms was O(f2) of Bhattacharya, Henzinger, and Italiano [Design of dynamic algorithms via primal-dual method, in Proceedings ICALP 2015, Springer, pp. 206–218]. In contrast, the only result with O(f) -approximation was that of Abboud et al. [Dynamic set cover: Improved algorithms and lower bounds, in Proceedings STOC 2019, ACM, pp. 114–125], who designed a randomized (1+∈)f -approximation algorithm with amortized update time. (2) O(f2/∈3 + (f/∈2).logC) amortized update time: This result improves the above update time bound for most values of f in the low-frequency range, i.e., f=o(log n) . It is also the first result that is independent of m and n. It subsumes the constant amortized update time of Bhattacharya and Kulkarni [Deterministically maintaining a (2 + ∈) -approximate minimum vertex cover in O(1/∈2) amortized update time, in Proceedings SODA 2019, SIAM, pp. 1872–1885] for unweighted dynamic vertex cover (i.e., when f = 2 and C = 1). (3) O((f/∈3).log2(Cn)) worst-case update time: No nontrivial worst-case update time was previously known for the dynamic set cover problem. Our bound subsumes and improves by a logarithmic factor the O(log3n/poly (∈)) worst-case update time for the unweighted dynamic vertex cover problem (i.e., when f = 2 and C =1) of Bhattacharya, Henzinger, and Nanongkai [Fully dynamic approximate maximum matching and minimum vertex cover in O(log3)n worst case update time, in Proceedings SODA 2017, SIAM, pp. 470–489]. We achieve our results via the primal-dual approach, by maintaining a fractional packing solution as a dual certificate. Prior work in dynamic algorithms that employs the primal-dual approach uses a local update scheme that maintains relaxed complementary slackness conditions for every set. For our first result we use instead a global update scheme that does not always maintain complementary slackness conditions. For our second result we combine the global and the local update schema. To achieve our third result we use a hierarchy of background schedulers. It is an interesting open question whether this background scheduler technique can also be used to transform algorithms with amortized running time bounds into algorithms with worst-case running time bounds. AU - Bhattacharya, Sayan AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Nanongkai, Danupon AU - Wu, Xiaowei ID - 14558 IS - 5 JF - SIAM Journal on Computing SN - 0097-5397 TI - Deterministic near-optimal approximation algorithms for dynamic set cover VL - 52 ER - TY - CONF AB - We consider the problem of learning control policies in discrete-time stochastic systems which guarantee that the system stabilizes within some specified stabilization region with probability 1. Our approach is based on the novel notion of stabilizing ranking supermartingales (sRSMs) that we introduce in this work. Our sRSMs overcome the limitation of methods proposed in previous works whose applicability is restricted to systems in which the stabilizing region cannot be left once entered under any control policy. We present a learning procedure that learns a control policy together with an sRSM that formally certifies probability 1 stability, both learned as neural networks. We show that this procedure can also be adapted to formally verifying that, under a given Lipschitz continuous control policy, the stochastic system stabilizes within some stabilizing region with probability 1. Our experimental evaluation shows that our learning procedure can successfully learn provably stabilizing policies in practice. AU - Ansaripour, Matin AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Lechner, Mathias AU - Zikelic, Dorde ID - 14559 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - 21st International Symposium on Automated Technology for Verification and Analysis TI - Learning provably stabilizing neural controllers for discrete-time stochastic systems VL - 14215 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The Regularised Inertial Dean–Kawasaki model (RIDK) – introduced by the authors and J. Zimmer in earlier works – is a nonlinear stochastic PDE capturing fluctuations around the meanfield limit for large-scale particle systems in both particle density and momentum density. We focus on the following two aspects. Firstly, we set up a Discontinuous Galerkin (DG) discretisation scheme for the RIDK model: we provide suitable definitions of numerical fluxes at the interface of the mesh elements which are consistent with the wave-type nature of the RIDK model and grant stability of the simulations, and we quantify the rate of convergence in mean square to the continuous RIDK model. Secondly, we introduce modifications of the RIDK model in order to preserve positivity of the density (such a feature only holds in a “high-probability sense” for the original RIDK model). By means of numerical simulations, we show that the modifications lead to physically realistic and positive density profiles. In one case, subject to additional regularity constraints, we also prove positivity. Finally, we present an application of our methodology to a system of diffusing and reacting particles. Our Python code is available in open-source format. AU - Cornalba, Federico AU - Shardlow, Tony ID - 14554 IS - 5 JF - ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis SN - 2822-7840 TI - The regularised inertial Dean' Kawasaki equation: Discontinuous Galerkin approximation and modelling for low-density regime VL - 57 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Inversions are structural mutations that reverse the sequence of a chromosome segment and reduce the effective rate of recombination in the heterozygous state. They play a major role in adaptation, as well as in other evolutionary processes such as speciation. Although inversions have been studied since the 1920s, they remain difficult to investigate because the reduced recombination conferred by them strengthens the effects of drift and hitchhiking, which in turn can obscure signatures of selection. Nonetheless, numerous inversions have been found to be under selection. Given recent advances in population genetic theory and empirical study, here we review how different mechanisms of selection affect the evolution of inversions. A key difference between inversions and other mutations, such as single nucleotide variants, is that the fitness of an inversion may be affected by a larger number of frequently interacting processes. This considerably complicates the analysis of the causes underlying the evolution of inversions. We discuss the extent to which these mechanisms can be disentangled, and by which approach. AU - Berdan, Emma L. AU - Barton, Nicholas H AU - Butlin, Roger AU - Charlesworth, Brian AU - Faria, Rui AU - Fragata, Inês AU - Gilbert, Kimberly J. AU - Jay, Paul AU - Kapun, Martin AU - Lotterhos, Katie E. AU - Mérot, Claire AU - Durmaz Mitchell, Esra AU - Pascual, Marta AU - Peichel, Catherine L. AU - Rafajlović, Marina AU - Westram, Anja M AU - Schaeffer, Stephen W. AU - Johannesson, Kerstin AU - Flatt, Thomas ID - 14556 JF - Journal of Evolutionary Biology SN - 1010-061X TI - How chromosomal inversions reorient the evolutionary process ER - TY - JOUR AB - The intricate regulatory processes behind actin polymerization play a crucial role in cellular biology, including essential mechanisms such as cell migration or cell division. However, the self-organizing principles governing actin polymerization are still poorly understood. In this perspective article, we compare the Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction, a classic and well understood chemical oscillator known for its self-organizing spatiotemporal dynamics, with the excitable dynamics of polymerizing actin. While the BZ reaction originates from the domain of inorganic chemistry, it shares remarkable similarities with actin polymerization, including the characteristic propagating waves, which are influenced by geometry and external fields, and the emergent collective behavior. Starting with a general description of emerging patterns, we elaborate on single droplets or cell-level dynamics, the influence of geometric confinements and conclude with collective interactions. Comparing these two systems sheds light on the universal nature of self-organization principles in both living and inanimate systems. AU - Riedl, Michael AU - Sixt, Michael K ID - 14555 JF - Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology TI - The excitable nature of polymerizing actin and the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The acyl-CoA-binding domain-containing protein 6 (ACBD6) is ubiquitously expressed, plays a role in the acylation of lipids and proteins, and regulates the N-myristoylation of proteins via N-myristoyltransferase enzymes (NMTs). However, its precise function in cells is still unclear, as is the consequence of ACBD6 defects on human pathophysiology. Utilizing exome sequencing and extensive international data sharing efforts, we identified 45 affected individuals from 28 unrelated families (consanguinity 93%) with bi-allelic pathogenic, predominantly loss-of-function (18/20) variants in ACBD6. We generated zebrafish and Xenopus tropicalis acbd6 knockouts by CRISPR/Cas9 and characterized the role of ACBD6 on protein N-myristoylation with YnMyr chemical proteomics in the model organisms and human cells, with the latter also being subjected further to ACBD6 peroxisomal localization studies. The affected individuals (23 males and 22 females), with ages ranging from 1 to 50 years old, typically present with a complex and progressive disease involving moderate-to-severe global developmental delay/intellectual disability (100%) with significant expressive language impairment (98%), movement disorders (97%), facial dysmorphism (95%), and mild cerebellar ataxia (85%) associated with gait impairment (94%), limb spasticity/hypertonia (76%), oculomotor (71%) and behavioural abnormalities (65%), overweight (59%), microcephaly (39%) and epilepsy (33%). The most conspicuous and common movement disorder was dystonia (94%), frequently leading to early-onset progressive postural deformities (97%), limb dystonia (55%), and cervical dystonia (31%). A jerky tremor in the upper limbs (63%), a mild head tremor (59%), parkinsonism/hypokinesia developing with advancing age (32%), and simple motor and vocal tics were among other frequent movement disorders. Midline brain malformations including corpus callosum abnormalities (70%), hypoplasia/agenesis of the anterior commissure (66%), short midbrain and small inferior cerebellar vermis (38% each), as well as hypertrophy of the clava (24%) were common neuroimaging findings. acbd6-deficient zebrafish and Xenopus models effectively recapitulated many clinical phenotypes reported in patients including movement disorders, progressive neuromotor impairment, seizures, microcephaly, craniofacial dysmorphism, and midbrain defects accompanied by developmental delay with increased mortality over time. Unlike ACBD5, ACBD6 did not show a peroxisomal localisation and ACBD6-deficiency was not associated with altered peroxisomal parameters in patient fibroblasts. Significant differences in YnMyr-labelling were observed for 68 co- and 18 post-translationally N-myristoylated proteins in patient-derived fibroblasts. N-Myristoylation was similarly affected in acbd6-deficient zebrafish and Xenopus tropicalis models, including Fus, Marcks, and Chchd-related proteins implicated in neurological diseases. The present study provides evidence that bi-allelic pathogenic variants in ACBD6 lead to a distinct neurodevelopmental syndrome accompanied by complex and progressive cognitive and movement disorders. AU - Kaiyrzhanov, Rauan AU - Rad, Aboulfazl AU - Lin, Sheng-Jia AU - Bertoli-Avella, Aida AU - Kallemeijn, Wouter W AU - Godwin, Annie AU - Zaki, Maha S AU - Huang, Kevin AU - Lau, Tracy AU - Petree, Cassidy AU - Efthymiou, Stephanie AU - Ghayoor Karimiani, Ehsan AU - Hempel, Maja AU - Normand, Elizabeth A AU - Rudnik-Schöneborn, Sabine AU - Schatz, Ulrich A AU - Baggelaar, Marc P AU - Ilyas, Muhammad AU - Sultan, Tipu AU - Alvi, Javeria Raza AU - Ganieva, Manizha AU - Fowler, Ben AU - Aanicai, Ruxandra AU - Akay Tayfun, Gulsen AU - Al Saman, Abdulaziz AU - Alswaid, Abdulrahman AU - Amiri, Nafise AU - Asilova, Nilufar AU - Shotelersuk, Vorasuk AU - Yeetong, Patra AU - Azam, Matloob AU - Babaei, Meisam AU - Bahrami Monajemi, Gholamreza AU - Mohammadi, Pouria AU - Samie, Saeed AU - Banu, Selina Husna AU - Basto, Jorge Pinto AU - Kortüm, Fanny AU - Bauer, Mislen AU - Bauer, Peter AU - Beetz, Christian AU - Garshasbi, Masoud AU - Hameed Issa, Awatif AU - Eyaid, Wafaa AU - Ahmed, Hind AU - Hashemi, Narges AU - Hassanpour, Kazem AU - Herman, Isabella AU - Ibrohimov, Sherozjon AU - Abdul-Majeed, Ban A AU - Imdad, Maria AU - Isrofilov, Maksudjon AU - Kaiyal, Qassem AU - Khan, Suliman AU - Kirmse, Brian AU - Koster, Janet AU - Lourenço, Charles Marques AU - Mitani, Tadahiro AU - Moldovan, Oana AU - Murphy, David AU - Najafi, Maryam AU - Pehlivan, Davut AU - Rocha, Maria Eugenia AU - Salpietro, Vincenzo AU - Schmidts, Miriam AU - Shalata, Adel AU - Mahroum, Mohammad AU - Talbeya, Jawabreh Kassem AU - Taylor, Robert W AU - Vazquez, Dayana AU - Vetro, Annalisa AU - Waterham, Hans R AU - Zaman, Mashaya AU - Schrader, Tina A AU - Chung, Wendy K AU - Guerrini, Renzo AU - Lupski, James R AU - Gleeson, Joseph AU - Suri, Mohnish AU - Jamshidi, Yalda AU - Bhatia, Kailash P AU - Vona, Barbara AU - Schrader, Michael AU - Severino, Mariasavina AU - Guille, Matthew AU - Tate, Edward W AU - Varshney, Gaurav K AU - Houlden, Henry AU - Maroofian, Reza ID - 14543 JF - Brain KW - Neurology (clinical) SN - 0006-8950 TI - Bi-allelic ACBD6 variants lead to a neurodevelopmental syndrome with progressive and complex movement disorders ER - TY - JOUR AB - It is a remarkable property of BCS theory that the ratio of the energy gap at zero temperature Ξ and the critical temperature Tc is (approximately) given by a universal constant, independent of the microscopic details of the fermionic interaction. This universality has rigorously been proven quite recently in three spatial dimensions and three different limiting regimes: weak coupling, low density and high density. The goal of this short note is to extend the universal behavior to lower dimensions d=1,2 and give an exemplary proof in the weak coupling limit. AU - Henheik, Sven Joscha AU - Lauritsen, Asbjørn Bækgaard AU - Roos, Barbara ID - 14542 JF - Reviews in Mathematical Physics SN - 0129-055X TI - Universality in low-dimensional BCS theory ER - TY - JOUR AB - Quantum state tomography is an essential component of modern quantum technology. In application to continuous-variable harmonic-oscillator systems, such as the electromagnetic field, existing tomography methods typically reconstruct the state in discrete bases, and are hence limited to states with relatively low amplitudes and energies. Here, we overcome this limitation by utilizing a feed-forward neural network to obtain the density matrix directly in the continuous position basis. An important benefit of our approach is the ability to choose specific regions in the phase space for detailed reconstruction. This results in a relatively slow scaling of the amount of resources required for the reconstruction with the state amplitude, and hence allows us to dramatically increase the range of amplitudes accessible with our method. AU - Fedotova, Ekaterina AU - Kuznetsov, Nikolai AU - Tiunov, Egor AU - Ulanov, A. E. AU - Lvovsky, A. I. ID - 14553 IS - 4 JF - Physical Review A SN - 2469-9926 TI - Continuous-variable quantum tomography of high-amplitude states VL - 108 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Motivated by a problem posed in [10], we investigate the closure operators of the category SLatt of join semilattices and its subcategory SLattO of join semilattices with bottom element. In particular, we show that there are only finitely many closure operators of both categories, and provide a complete classification. We use this result to deduce the known fact that epimorphisms of SLatt and SLattO are surjective. We complement the paper with two different proofs of this result using either generators or Isbell’s zigzag theorem. AU - Dikranjan, D. AU - Giordano Bruno, A. AU - Zava, Nicolò ID - 14557 IS - S1 JF - Quaestiones Mathematicae SN - 1607-3606 TI - Epimorphisms and closure operators of categories of semilattices VL - 46 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is highly variable. The amount of variability within a system is thought to influence most aspects of plant-herbivore biology, from ecological stability to plant defense evolution. Our understanding of what influences variability, however, is limited by sparse data. We collected standardized surveys of herbivory for 503 plant species at 790 sites across 116° of latitude. With these data, we show that within-population variability in herbivory increases with latitude, decreases with plant size, and is phylogenetically structured. Differences in the magnitude of variability are thus central to how plant-herbivore biology varies across macroscale gradients. We argue that increased focus on interaction variability will advance understanding of patterns of life on Earth. AU - Robinson, M. L. AU - Hahn, P. G. AU - Inouye, B. D. AU - Underwood, N. AU - Whitehead, S. R. AU - Abbott, K. C. AU - Bruna, E. M. AU - Cacho, N. I. AU - Dyer, L. A. AU - Abdala-Roberts, L. AU - Allen, W. J. AU - Andrade, J. F. AU - Angulo, D. F. AU - Anjos, D. AU - Anstett, D. N. AU - Bagchi, R. AU - Bagchi, S. AU - Barbosa, M. AU - Barrett, S. AU - Baskett, Carina AU - Ben-Simchon, E. AU - Bloodworth, K. J. AU - Bronstein, J. L. AU - Buckley, Y. M. AU - Burghardt, K. T. AU - Bustos-Segura, C. AU - Calixto, E. S. AU - Carvalho, R. L. AU - Castagneyrol, B. AU - Chiuffo, M. C. AU - Cinoğlu, D. AU - Cinto Mejía, E. AU - Cock, M. C. AU - Cogni, R. AU - Cope, O. L. AU - Cornelissen, T. AU - Cortez, D. R. AU - Crowder, D. W. AU - Dallstream, C. AU - Dáttilo, W. AU - Davis, J. K. AU - Dimarco, R. D. AU - Dole, H. E. AU - Egbon, I. N. AU - Eisenring, M. AU - Ejomah, A. AU - Elderd, B. D. AU - Endara, M. J. AU - Eubanks, M. D. AU - Everingham, S. E. AU - Farah, K. N. AU - Farias, R. P. AU - Fernandes, A. P. AU - Fernandes, G. W. AU - Ferrante, M. AU - Finn, A. AU - Florjancic, G. A. AU - Forister, M. L. AU - Fox, Q. N. AU - Frago, E. AU - França, F. M. AU - Getman-Pickering, A. S. AU - Getman-Pickering, Z. AU - Gianoli, E. AU - Gooden, B. AU - Gossner, M. M. AU - Greig, K. A. AU - Gripenberg, S. AU - Groenteman, R. AU - Grof-Tisza, P. AU - Haack, N. AU - Hahn, L. AU - Haq, S. M. AU - Helms, A. M. AU - Hennecke, J. AU - Hermann, S. L. AU - Holeski, L. M. AU - Holm, S. AU - Hutchinson, M. C. AU - Jackson, E. E. AU - Kagiya, S. AU - Kalske, A. AU - Kalwajtys, M. AU - Karban, R. AU - Kariyat, R. AU - Keasar, T. AU - Kersch-Becker, M. F. AU - Kharouba, H. M. AU - Kim, T. N. AU - Kimuyu, D. M. AU - Kluse, J. AU - Koerner, S. E. AU - Komatsu, K. J. AU - Krishnan, S. AU - Laihonen, M. AU - Lamelas-López, L. AU - Lascaleia, M. C. AU - Lecomte, N. AU - Lehn, C. R. AU - Li, X. AU - Lindroth, R. L. AU - Lopresti, E. F. AU - Losada, M. AU - Louthan, A. M. AU - Luizzi, V. J. AU - Lynch, S. C. AU - Lynn, J. S. AU - Lyon, N. J. AU - Maia, L. F. AU - Maia, R. A. AU - Mannall, T. L. AU - Martin, B. S. AU - Massad, T. J. AU - Mccall, A. C. AU - Mcgurrin, K. AU - Merwin, A. C. AU - Mijango-Ramos, Z. AU - Mills, C. H. AU - Moles, A. T. AU - Moore, C. M. AU - Moreira, X. AU - Morrison, C. R. AU - Moshobane, M. C. AU - Muola, A. AU - Nakadai, R. AU - Nakajima, K. AU - Novais, S. AU - Ogbebor, C. O. AU - Ohsaki, H. AU - Pan, V. S. AU - Pardikes, N. A. AU - Pareja, M. AU - Parthasarathy, N. AU - Pawar, R. R. AU - Paynter, Q. AU - Pearse, I. S. AU - Penczykowski, R. M. AU - Pepi, A. A. AU - Pereira, C. C. AU - Phartyal, S. S. AU - Piper, F. I. AU - Poveda, K. AU - Pringle, E. G. AU - Puy, J. AU - Quijano, T. AU - Quintero, C. AU - Rasmann, S. AU - Rosche, C. AU - Rosenheim, L. Y. AU - Rosenheim, J. A. AU - Runyon, J. B. AU - Sadeh, A. AU - Sakata, Y. AU - Salcido, D. M. AU - Salgado-Luarte, C. AU - Santos, B. A. AU - Sapir, Y. AU - Sasal, Y. AU - Sato, Y. AU - Sawant, M. AU - Schroeder, H. AU - Schumann, I. AU - Segoli, M. AU - Segre, H. AU - Shelef, O. AU - Shinohara, N. AU - Singh, R. P. AU - Smith, D. S. AU - Sobral, M. AU - Stotz, G. C. AU - Tack, A. J.M. AU - Tayal, M. AU - Tooker, J. F. AU - Torrico-Bazoberry, D. AU - Tougeron, K. AU - Trowbridge, A. M. AU - Utsumi, S. AU - Uyi, O. AU - Vaca-Uribe, J. L. AU - Valtonen, A. AU - Van Dijk, L. J.A. AU - Vandvik, V. AU - Villellas, J. AU - Waller, L. P. AU - Weber, M. G. AU - Yamawo, A. AU - Yim, S. AU - Zarnetske, P. L. AU - Zehr, L. N. AU - Zhong, Z. AU - Wetzel, W. C. ID - 14552 IS - 6671 JF - Science TI - Plant size, latitude, and phylogeny explain within-population variability in herbivory VL - 382 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Methylation of CG dinucleotides (mCGs), which regulates eukaryotic genome functions, is epigenetically propagated by Dnmt1/MET1 methyltransferases. How mCG is established and transmitted across generations despite imperfect enzyme fidelity is unclear. Whether mCG variation in natural populations is governed by genetic or epigenetic inheritance also remains mysterious. Here, we show that MET1 de novo activity, which is enhanced by existing proximate methylation, seeds and stabilizes mCG in Arabidopsis thaliana genes. MET1 activity is restricted by active demethylation and suppressed by histone variant H2A.Z, producing localized mCG patterns. Based on these observations, we develop a stochastic mathematical model that precisely recapitulates mCG inheritance dynamics and predicts intragenic mCG patterns and their population-scale variation given only CG site spacing. Our results demonstrate that intragenic mCG establishment, inheritance, and variance constitute a unified epigenetic process, revealing that intragenic mCG undergoes large, millennia-long epigenetic fluctuations and can therefore mediate evolution on this timescale. AU - Briffa, Amy AU - Hollwey, Elizabeth AU - Shahzad, Zaigham AU - Moore, Jonathan D. AU - Lyons, David B. AU - Howard, Martin AU - Zilberman, Daniel ID - 14551 IS - 11 JF - Cell Systems SN - 2405-4712 TI - Millennia-long epigenetic fluctuations generate intragenic DNA methylation variance in Arabidopsis populations VL - 14 ER -