TY - JOUR AB - Diffraction-unlimited far-field super-resolution fluorescence (nanoscopy) methods typically rely on transiently transferring fluorophores between two states, whereby this transfer is usually laid out as a switch. However, depending on whether this is induced in a spatially controlled manner using a pattern of light (coordinate-targeted) or stochastically on a single-molecule basis, specific requirements on the fluorophores are imposed. Therefore, the fluorophores are usually utilized just for one class of methods only. In this study we demonstrate that the reversibly switchable fluorescent protein Dreiklang enables live-cell recordings in both spatially controlled and stochastic modes. We show that the Dreiklang chromophore entails three different light-induced switching mechanisms, namely a reversible photochemical one, off-switching by stimulated emission, and a reversible transfer to a long-lived dark state from the S1 state, all of which can be utilized to overcome the diffraction barrier. We also find that for the single-molecule- based stochastic GSDIM approach (ground-state depletion followed by individual molecule return), Dreiklang provides a larger number of on-off localization events as compared to its progenitor Citrine. Altogether, Dreiklang is a versatile probe for essentially all popular forms of live-cell fluorescence nanoscopy. AU - Jensen, Nickels AU - Danzl, Johann G AU - Willig, Katrin AU - Lavoie Cardinal, Flavie AU - Brakemann, Tanja AU - Hell, Stefan AU - Jakobs, Stefan ID - 1058 IS - 4 JF - ChemPhysChem TI - Coordinate-targeted and coordinate-stochastic super-resolution microscopy with the reversibly switchable fluorescent protein dreiklang VL - 15 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the last several decades, developmental biology has clarified the molecular mechanisms of embryogenesis and organogenesis. In particular, it has demonstrated that the “tool-kit genes” essential for regulating developmental processes are not only highly conserved among species, but are also used as systems at various times and places in an organism to control distinct developmental events. Therefore, mutations in many of these tool-kit genes may cause congenital diseases involving morphological abnormalities. This link between genes and abnormal morphological phenotypes underscores the importance of understanding how cells behave and contribute to morphogenesis as a result of gene function. Recent improvements in live imaging and in quantitative analyses of cellular dynamics will advance our understanding of the cellular pathogenesis of congenital diseases associated with aberrant morphologies. In these studies, it is critical to select an appropriate model organism for the particular phenomenon of interest. AU - Hashimoto, Masakazu AU - Morita, Hitoshi AU - Ueno, Naoto ID - 10815 IS - 1 JF - Congenital Anomalies KW - Developmental Biology KW - Embryology KW - General Medicine KW - Pediatrics KW - Perinatology KW - and Child Health SN - 0914-3505 TI - Molecular and cellular mechanisms of development underlying congenital diseases VL - 54 ER - TY - BOOK AB - Auxin is an important signaling compound in plants and vital for plant development and growth. The present book, Auxin and its Role in Plant Development, provides the reader with detailed and comprehensive insight into the functioning of the molecule on the whole and specifically in plant development. In the first part, the functioning, metabolism and signaling pathways of auxin in plants are explained, the second part depicts the specific role of auxin in plant development and the third part describes the interaction and functioning of the signaling compound upon stimuli of the environment. Each chapter is written by international experts in the respective field and designed for scientists and researchers in plant biology, plant development and cell biology to summarize the recent progress in understanding the role of auxin and suggest future perspectives for auxin research. ED - Zažímalová, Eva ED - Petrášek, Jan ED - Benková, Eva ID - 10811 SN - 9783709115251 TI - Auxin and Its Role in Plant Development ER - TY - CONF AB - We revisit the parameterized model checking problem for token-passing systems and specifications in indexed CTL  ∗ \X. Emerson and Namjoshi (1995, 2003) have shown that parameterized model checking of indexed CTL  ∗ \X in uni-directional token rings can be reduced to checking rings up to some cutoff size. Clarke et al. (2004) have shown a similar result for general topologies and indexed LTL \X, provided processes cannot choose the directions for sending or receiving the token. We unify and substantially extend these results by systematically exploring fragments of indexed CTL  ∗ \X with respect to general topologies. For each fragment we establish whether a cutoff exists, and for some concrete topologies, such as rings, cliques and stars, we infer small cutoffs. Finally, we show that the problem becomes undecidable, and thus no cutoffs exist, if processes are allowed to choose the directions in which they send or from which they receive the token. AU - Aminof, Benjamin AU - Jacobs, Swen AU - Khalimov, Ayrat AU - Rubin, Sasha ID - 10884 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - Verification, Model Checking, and Abstract Interpretation TI - Parameterized model checking of token-passing systems VL - 8318 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Saddle periodic orbits are an essential and stable part of the topological skeleton of a 3D vector field. Nevertheless, there is currently no efficient algorithm to robustly extract these features. In this chapter, we present a novel technique to extract saddle periodic orbits. Exploiting the analytic properties of such an orbit, we propose a scalar measure based on the finite-time Lyapunov exponent (FTLE) that indicates its presence. Using persistent homology, we can then extract the robust cycles of this field. These cycles thereby represent the saddle periodic orbits of the given vector field. We discuss the different existing FTLE approximation schemes regarding their applicability to this specific problem and propose an adapted version of FTLE called Normalized Velocity Separation. Finally, we evaluate our method using simple analytic vector field data. AU - Kasten, Jens AU - Reininghaus, Jan AU - Reich, Wieland AU - Scheuermann, Gerik ED - Bremer, Peer-Timo ED - Hotz, Ingrid ED - Pascucci, Valerio ED - Peikert, Ronald ID - 10893 SN - 1612-3786 T2 - Topological Methods in Data Analysis and Visualization III TI - Toward the extraction of saddle periodic orbits VL - 1 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The spindle assembly checkpoint prevents separation of sister chromatids until each kinetochore is attached to the mitotic spindle. Rodriguez-Bravo et al. report that the nuclear pore complex scaffolds spindle assembly checkpoint signaling in interphase, providing a store of inhibitory signals that limits the speed of the subsequent mitosis. AU - Buchwalter, Abigail AU - HETZER, Martin W ID - 11080 IS - 5 JF - Cell KW - General Biochemistry KW - Genetics and Molecular Biology SN - 0092-8674 TI - Nuclear pores set the speed limit for mitosis VL - 156 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The nuclear pore complex (NPC) plays a critical role in gene expression by mediating import of transcription regulators into the nucleus and export of RNA transcripts to the cytoplasm. Emerging evidence suggests that in addition to mediating transport, a subset of nucleoporins (Nups) engage in transcriptional activation and elongation at genomic loci that are not associated with NPCs. The underlying mechanism and regulation of Nup mobility on and off nuclear pores remain unclear. Here we show that Nup50 is a mobile Nup with a pronounced presence both at the NPC and in the nucleoplasm that can move between these different localizations. Strikingly, the dynamic behavior of Nup50 in both locations is dependent on active transcription by RNA polymerase II and requires the N-terminal half of the protein, which contains importin α– and Nup153-binding domains. However, Nup50 dynamics are independent of importin α, Nup153, and Nup98, even though the latter two proteins also exhibit transcription-dependent mobility. Of interest, depletion of Nup50 from C2C12 myoblasts does not affect cell proliferation but inhibits differentiation into myotubes. Taken together, our results suggest a transport-independent role for Nup50 in chromatin biology that occurs away from the NPC. AU - Buchwalter, Abigail L. AU - Liang, Yun AU - HETZER, Martin W ID - 11082 IS - 16 JF - Molecular Biology of the Cell KW - Cell Biology KW - Molecular Biology SN - 1059-1524 TI - Nup50 is required for cell differentiation and exhibits transcription-dependent dynamics VL - 25 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In eukaryotic cells the nuclear genome is enclosed by the nuclear envelope (NE). In metazoans, the NE breaks down in mitosis and it has been assumed that the physical barrier separating nucleoplasm and cytoplasm remains intact during the rest of the cell cycle and cell differentiation. However, recent studies suggest that nonmitotic NE remodeling plays a critical role in development, virus infection, laminopathies, and cancer. Although the mechanisms underlying these NE restructuring events are currently being defined, one common theme is activation of protein kinase C family members in the interphase nucleus to disrupt the nuclear lamina, demonstrating the importance of the lamina in maintaining nuclear integrity. AU - Hatch, Emily AU - HETZER, Martin W ID - 11081 IS - 2 JF - Journal of Cell Biology KW - Cell Biology SN - 1540-8140 TI - Breaching the nuclear envelope in development and disease VL - 205 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Candidate galaxies at redshifts of z ∼ 10 are now being found in extremely deep surveys, probing very small areas. As a consequence, candidates are very faint, making spectroscopic confirmation practically impossible. In order to overcome such limitations, we have undertaken the CF-HiZELS survey, which is a large-area, medium-depth near-infrared narrow-band survey targeted at z = 8.8 Lyman α (Lyα) emitters (LAEs) and covering 10 deg2 in part of the SSA22 field with the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). We surveyed a comoving volume of 4.7 × 106 Mpc3 to a Lyα luminosity limit of 6.3 × 1043舁erg舁s−1. We look for Lyα candidates by applying the following criteria: (i) clear emission-line source, (ii) no optical detections (ugriz from CFHTLS), (iii) no visible detection in the optical stack (ugriz > 27), (iv) visually checked reliable NBJ and J detections and (v) J − K ≤ 0. We compute photometric redshifts and remove a significant amount of dusty lower redshift line-emitters at z ∼ 1.4 or 2.2. A total of 13 Lyα candidates were found, of which two are marked as strong candidates, but the majority have very weak constraints on their spectral energy distributions. Using follow-up observations with SINFONI/VLT, we are able to exclude the most robust candidates as LAEs. We put a strong constraint on the Lyα luminosity function at z ∼ 9 and make realistic predictions for ongoing and future surveys. Our results show that surveys for the highest redshift LAEs are susceptible of multiple contaminations and that spectroscopic follow-up is absolutely necessary. AU - Matthee, Jorryt J AU - Sobral, David AU - Swinbank, A. M. AU - Smail, Ian AU - Best, P. N. AU - Kim, Jae-Woo AU - Franx, Marijn AU - Milvang-Jensen, Bo AU - Fynbo, Johan ID - 11583 IS - 3 JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society KW - Space and Planetary Science KW - Astronomy and Astrophysics KW - galaxies: evolution KW - galaxies: high-redshift KW - cosmology: observations KW - dark ages KW - reionization KW - first stars SN - 0035-8711 TI - A 10 deg2 Lyman α survey at z=8.8 with spectroscopic follow-up: Strong constraints on the luminosity function and implications for other surveys VL - 440 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We have observed a sample of typical z ∼ 1 star-forming galaxies, selected from the HiZELS survey, with the new K-band Multi-Object Spectrograph (KMOS) near-infrared, multi-integral field unit instrument on the Very Large Telescope (VLT), in order to obtain their dynamics and metallicity gradients. The majority of our galaxies have a metallicity gradient consistent with being flat or negative (i.e. higher metallicity cores than outskirts). Intriguingly, we find a trend between metallicity gradient and specific star formation rate (sSFR), such that galaxies with a high sSFR tend to have relatively metal poor centres, a result which is strengthened when combined with data sets from the literature. This result appears to explain the discrepancies reported between different high-redshift studies and varying claims for evolution. From a galaxy evolution perspective, the trend we see would mean that a galaxy's sSFR is governed by the amount of metal-poor gas that can be funnelled into its core, triggered either by merging or through efficient accretion. In fact, merging may play a significant role as it is the starburst galaxies at all epochs, which have the more positive metallicity gradients. Our results may help to explain the origin of the fundamental metallicity relation, in which galaxies at a fixed mass are observed to have lower metallicities at higher star formation rates, especially if the metallicity is measured in an aperture encompassing only the central regions of the galaxy. Finally, we note that this study demonstrates the power of KMOS as an efficient instrument for large-scale resolved galaxy surveys. AU - Stott, John P. AU - Sobral, David AU - Swinbank, A. M. AU - Smail, Ian AU - Bower, Richard AU - Best, Philip N. AU - Sharples, Ray M. AU - Geach, James E. AU - Matthee, Jorryt J ID - 11582 IS - 3 JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society KW - Space and Planetary Science KW - Astronomy and Astrophysics KW - galaxies: abundances KW - galaxies: evolution KW - galaxies: kinematics and dynamics SN - 0035-8711 TI - A relationship between specific star formation rate and metallicity gradient within z ∼ 1 galaxies from KMOS-HiZELS VL - 443 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We report on the magnetic properties of a hot-pressed FeSb 2 sample. We find a significant increase in the magnetic susceptibility in our sample when compared with the values previously reported for the polycrystalline sample. The pronounced Curie tail at low temperature corresponds to 0.2% of Fe 2+ impurities per mole. In the intrinsic conductivity region, the susceptibility due to free carriers shows thermally activated behavior and is consistent with the data reported for single crystal FeSb 2 . Based on our data and analysis, while the enhanced magnetic susceptibility in our sample comes mainly from a small amount of unreacted Fe, the contribution from the enhanced carrier density due to lattice and strain defects arising from the ball milling process is also significant. Existence of an unreacted Fe phase is evidenced by small coercivity values of ~100 observed at 50 and 300 K. AU - Pokharel, Mani AU - Zhao, Huaizhou AU - Modic, Kimberly A AU - Ren, Zhifeng AU - Opeil, Cyril ID - 11750 IS - 5 JF - IEEE Transactions on Magnetics SN - 0018-9464 TI - Magnetic properties of hot-pressed FeSb2 VL - 50 ER - TY - CONF AB - We study a weighted online bipartite matching problem: G(V 1, V 2, E) is a weighted bipartite graph where V 1 is known beforehand and the vertices of V 2 arrive online. The goal is to match vertices of V 2 as they arrive to vertices in V 1, so as to maximize the sum of weights of edges in the matching. If assignments to V 1 cannot be changed, no bounded competitive ratio is achievable. We study the weighted online matching problem with free disposal, where vertices in V 1 can be assigned multiple times, but only get credit for the maximum weight edge assigned to them over the course of the algorithm. For this problem, the greedy algorithm is 0.5-competitive and determining whether a better competitive ratio is achievable is a well known open problem. We identify an interesting special case where the edge weights are decomposable as the product of two factors, one corresponding to each end point of the edge. This is analogous to the well studied related machines model in the scheduling literature, although the objective functions are different. For this case of decomposable edge weights, we design a 0.5664 competitive randomized algorithm in complete bipartite graphs. We show that such instances with decomposable weights are non-trivial by establishing upper bounds of 0.618 for deterministic and 0.8 for randomized algorithms. A tight competitive ratio of 1 − 1/e ≈ 0.632 was known previously for both the 0-1 case as well as the case where edge weights depend on the offline vertices only, but for these cases, reassignments cannot change the quality of the solution. Beating 0.5 for weighted matching where reassignments are necessary has been a significant challenge. We thus give the first online algorithm with competitive ratio strictly better than 0.5 for a non-trivial case of weighted matching with free disposal. AU - Charikar, Moses AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Nguyễn, Huy L. ID - 11789 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - 22nd Annual European Symposium on Algorithms TI - Online bipartite matching with decomposable weights VL - 8737 ER - TY - CONF AB - Assume a seller wants to sell a digital product in a social network where a buyer’s valuation of the item has positive network externalities from her neighbors that already have the item. The goal of the seller is to maximize his revenue. Previous work on this problem [7] studies the case where clients are offered the item in sequence and have to pay personalized prices. This is highly infeasible in large scale networks such as the Facebook graph: (1) Offering items to the clients one after the other consumes a large amount of time, and (2) price-discrimination of clients could appear unfair to them and result in negative client reaction or could conflict with legal requirements. We study a setting dealing with these issues. Specifically, the item is offered in parallel to multiple clients at the same time and at the same price. This is called a round. We show that with O(logn) rounds, where n is the number of clients, a constant factor of the revenue with price discrimination can be achieved and that this is not possible with o(logn) rounds. Moreover we show that it is APX-hard to maximize the revenue and we give constant factor approximation algorithms for various further settings of limited price discrimination. AU - Cigler, Luděk AU - Dvořák, Wolfgang AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Starnberger, Martin ID - 11790 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - 10th International Conference of Web and Internet Economics TI - Limiting price discrimination when selling products with positive network externalities VL - 8877 ER - TY - JOUR AB - While the penetration of objects into granular media is well-studied, there is little understanding of how objects settle in gravities, geff, different from that of Earth - a scenario potentially relevant to the geomorphology of planets and asteroids and also to their exploration using man-made devices. By conducting experiments in an accelerating frame, we explore geff ranging from 0.4 g to 1.2 g. Surprisingly, we find that the rest depth is independent of geff and also that the time required for the object to come to rest scales like geff-1/2. With discrete element modeling simulations, we reproduce the experimental results and extend the range of geff to objects as small as asteroids and as large as Jupiter. Our results shed light on the initial stage of sedimentation into dry granular media across a range of celestial bodies and also have implications for the design of man-made, extraterrestrial vehicles and structures. Key Points The settling depth in granular media is independent of gravity The settling time scales like g-1/2 Layering driven by granular sedimentation should be similar. AU - Altshuler, Ernesto AU - Torres, H AU - González_Pita, A AU - Sánchez, Colina G AU - Pérez Penichet, Carlos AU - Waitukaitis, Scott R AU - Hidalgo, Rauól ID - 118 IS - 9 JF - Geophysical Research Letters TI - Settling into dry granular media in different gravities VL - 41 ER - TY - CONF AB - The decremental single-source shortest paths (SSSP) problem concerns maintaining the distances between a given source node s to every node in an n-node m-edge graph G undergoing edge deletions. While its static counterpart can be easily solved in near-linear time, this decremental problem is much more challenging even in the undirected unweighted case. In this case, the classic O(mn) total update time of Even and Shiloach (JACM 1981) has been the fastest known algorithm for three decades. With the loss of a (1 + ε)-approximation factor, the running time was recently improved to O(n 2+o(1) ) by Bernstein and Roditty (SODA 2011), and more recently to O(n 1.8+o(1) + m 1+o(1) ) by Henzinger, Krinninger, and Nanongkai (SODA 2014). In this paper, we finally bring the running time of this case down to near-linear: We give a (1 + ε)-approximation algorithm with O(m 1+o(1) ) total update time, thus obtaining near-linear time. Moreover, we obtain O(m 1+o(1) log W) time for the weighted case, where the edge weights are integers from 1 to W. The only prior work on weighted graphs in o(mn log W) time is the O(mn 0.986 log W)-time algorithm by Henzinger, Krinninger, and Nanongkai (STOC 2014) which works for the general weighted directed case. In contrast to the previous results which rely on maintaining a sparse emulator, our algorithm relies on maintaining a so-called sparse (d, ε)-hop set introduced by Cohen (JACM 2000) in the PRAM literature. A (d, ε)-hop set of a graph G = (V, E) is a set E' of weighted edges such that the distance between any pair of nodes in G can be (1 + ε)-approximated by their d-hop distance (given by a path containing at most d edges) on G'=(V, E∪E'). Our algorithm can maintain an (n o(1) , ε)-hop set of near-linear size in near-linear time under edge deletions. It is the first of its kind to the best of our knowledge. To maintain the distances on this hop set, we develop a monotone bounded-hop Even-Shiloach tree. It results from extending and combining the monotone Even-Shiloach tree of Henzinger, Krinninger, and Nanongkai (FOCS 2013) with the bounded-hop SSSP technique of Bernstein (STOC 2013). These two new tools might be of independent interest. AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Krinninger, Sebastian AU - Nanongkai, Danupon ID - 11855 SN - 0272-5428 T2 - 55th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science TI - Decremental single-source shortest paths on undirected graphs in near-linear total update time ER - TY - CONF AB - We consider dynamic algorithms for maintaining Single-Source Reachability (SSR) and approximate Single-Source Shortest Paths (SSSP) on n-node m-edge directed graphs under edge deletions (decremental algorithms). The previous fastest algorithm for SSR and SSSP goes back three decades to Even and Shiloach (JACM 1981); it has O(1) query time and O(mn) total update time (i.e., linear amortized update time if all edges are deleted). This algorithm serves as a building block for several other dynamic algorithms. The question whether its total update time can be improved is a major, long standing, open problem. In this paper, we answer this question affirmatively. We obtain a randomized algorithm which, in a simplified form, achieves an Õ(mn0.984) expected total update time for SSR and (1 + ε)-approximate SSSP, where Õ(·) hides poly log n. We also extend our algorithm to achieve roughly the same running time for Strongly Connected Components (SCC), improving the algorithm of Roditty and Zwick (FOCS 2002), and an algorithm that improves the Õ (mn log W)-time algorithm of Bernstein (STOC 2013) for approximating SSSP on weighted directed graphs, where the edge weights are integers from 1 to W. All our algorithms have constant query time in the worst case. AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Krinninger, Sebastian AU - Nanongkai, Danupon ID - 11870 SN - 0737-8017 T2 - 46th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing TI - Sublinear-time decremental algorithms for single-source reachability and shortest paths on directed graphs ER - TY - CONF AB - We study dynamic (1 + ∊)-approximation algorithms for the single-source shortest paths problem in an unweighted undirected n-node m-edge graph under edge deletions. The fastest algorithm for this problem is an algorithm with O(n2+o(1)) total update time and constant query time by Bernstein and Roditty (SODA 2011). In this paper, we improve the total update time to O(n1.8+o(1) + m1+o(1)) while keeping the query time constant. This running time is essentially tight when m = Ω(n1.8) since we need Ω(m) time even in the static setting. For smaller values of m, the running time of our algorithm is subquadratic, and is the first that breaks through the quadratic time barrier. In obtaining this result, we develop a fast algorithm for what we call center cover data structure. We also make non-trivial extensions to our previous techniques called lazy-update and monotone Even-Shiloach trees (ICALP 2013 and FOCS 2013). As by-products of our new techniques, we obtain two new results for the decremental all-pairs shortest-paths problem. Our first result is the first approximation algorithm whose total update time is faster than Õ(mn) for all values of m. Our second result is a new trade-off between the total update time and the additive approximation guarantee. AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Krinninger, Sebastian AU - Nanongkai, Danupon ID - 11876 SN - 978-1-61197-338-9 T2 - 25th Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms TI - A subquadratic-time algorithm for decremental single-source shortest paths ER - TY - CONF AB - We present the first deterministic data structures for maintaining approximate minimum vertex cover and maximum matching in a fully dynamic graph in time per update. In particular, for minimum vertex cover we provide deterministic data structures for maintaining a (2 + ε) approximation in O(log n/ε2) amortized time per update. For maximum matching, we show how to maintain a (3 + e) approximation in O(m1/3/ε2) amortized time per update, and a (4 + ε) approximation in O(m1/3/ε2) worst-case time per update. Our data structure for fully dynamic minimum vertex cover is essentially near-optimal and settles an open problem by Onak and Rubinfeld [13]. AU - Bhattacharya, Sayan AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Italiano, Giuseppe F. ID - 11875 SN - 978-1-61197-374-7 T2 - 26th Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms TI - Deterministic fully dynamic data structures for vertex cover and matching ER - TY - JOUR AB - Observations of flowing granular matter have suggested that same-material tribocharging depends on particle size, typically rendering large grains positive and small ones negative. Models assuming the transfer of trapped electrons can account for this trend, but have not been validated. Tracking individual grains in an electric field, we show quantitatively that charge is transferred based on size between materially identical grains. However, the surface density of trapped electrons, measured independently by thermoluminescence techniques, is orders of magnitude too small to account for the scale of charge transferred. This reveals that trapped electrons are not a necessary ingredient for same-material tribocharging. AU - Waitukaitis, Scott R AU - Lee, Victor AU - Pierson, James AU - Forman, Steven AU - Jaeger, Heinrich ID - 119 IS - 21 JF - APS Physics, Physical Review Letters TI - Size-dependent same-material tribocharging in insulating grains VL - 112 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Membrane phospholipids typically contain fatty acids (FAs) of 16 and 18 carbon atoms. This particular chain length is evolutionarily highly conserved and presumably provides maximum stability and dynamic properties to biological membranes in response to nutritional or environmental cues. Here, we show that the relative proportion of C16 versus C18 FAs is regulated by the activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (Acc1), the first and rate-limiting enzyme of FA de novo synthesis. Acc1 activity is attenuated by AMPK/Snf1-dependent phosphorylation, which is required to maintain an appropriate acyl-chain length distribution. Moreover, we find that the transcriptional repressor Opi1 preferentially binds to C16 over C18 phosphatidic acid (PA) species: thus, C16-chain containing PA sequesters Opi1 more effectively to the ER, enabling AMPK/Snf1 control of PA acyl-chain length to determine the degree of derepression of Opi1 target genes. These findings reveal an unexpected regulatory link between the major energy-sensing kinase, membrane lipid composition, and transcription. AU - Hofbauer, Harald F. AU - Schopf, Florian H. AU - Schleifer, Hannes AU - Knittelfelder, Oskar L. AU - Pieber, Bartholomäus AU - Rechberger, Gerald N. AU - Wolinski, Heimo AU - Gaspar, Maria L. AU - Kappe, C. Oliver AU - Stadlmann, Johannes AU - Mechtler, Karl AU - Zenz, Alexandra AU - Lohner, Karl AU - Tehlivets, Oksana AU - Henry, Susan A. AU - Kohlwein, Sepp D. ID - 11968 IS - 6 JF - Developmental Cell SN - 1534-5807 TI - Regulation of gene expression through a transcriptional repressor that senses acyl-chain length in membrane phospholipids VL - 29 ER - TY - JOUR AB - An experimentally easy to perform method for the generation of alumina-supported Fe3O4 nanoparticles [(6±1) nm size, 0.67 wt %]and the use of this material in hydrazine-mediated heterogeneously catalyzed reductions of nitroarenes to anilines under batch and continuous-flow conditions is presented. The bench-stable, reusable nano-Fe3O4@Al2O3 catalyst can selectively reduce functionalized nitroarenes at 1 mol % catalyst loading by using a 20 mol % excess of hydrazine hydrate in an elevated temperature regime (150 °C, reaction time 2–6 min in batch). For continuous-flow processing, the catalyst material is packed into dedicated cartridges and used in a commercially available high-temperature/-pressure flow device. In continuous mode, reaction times can be reduced to less than 1 min at 150 °C (30 bar back pressure) in a highly intensified process. The nano-Fe3O4@Al2O3 catalyst demonstrated stable reduction of nitrobenzene (0.5 M in MeOH) for more than 10 h on stream at a productivity of 30 mmol h−1 (0.72 mol per day). Importantly, virtually no leaching of the catalytically active material could be observed by inductively coupled plasma MS monitoring. AU - Moghaddam, Mojtaba Mirhosseini AU - Pieber, Bartholomäus AU - Glasnov, Toma AU - Kappe, C. Oliver ID - 11967 IS - 11 JF - ChemSusChem SN - 1864-5631 TI - Immobilized iron oxide nanoparticles as stable and reusable catalysts for hydrazine-mediated nitro reductions in continuous flow VL - 7 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A method for the direct lithiation of terminal alkynes and heterocycles with subsequent carboxylation in a continuous flow format was developed. This method provides carboxylic acids at ambient conditions within less than five seconds with only little excess of the organometallic base and CO2. AU - Pieber, Bartholomäus AU - Glasnov, Toma AU - Kappe, C. O. ID - 11987 IS - 26 JF - RSC Advances TI - Flash carboxylation: Fast lithiation–carboxylation sequence at room temperature in continuous flow VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We show that weak solutions of the Derrida-Lebowitz-Speer-Spohn (DLSS) equation display infinite speed of support propagation. We apply our method to the case of the quantum drift-diffusion equation which augments the DLSS equation with a drift term and possibly a second-order diffusion term. The proof is accomplished using weighted entropy estimates, Hardy's inequality and a family of singular weight functions to derive a differential inequality; the differential inequality shows exponential growth of the weighted entropy, with the growth constant blowing up very fast as the singularity of the weight becomes sharper. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first example of a nonnegativity-preserving higher-order parabolic equation displaying infinite speed of support propagation. AU - Julian Fischer ID - 1309 IS - 1 JF - Nonlinear Differential Equations and Applications TI - Infinite speed of support propagation for the Derrida-Lebowitz-Speer-Spohn equation and quantum drift-diffusion models VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We derive upper bounds on the waiting time of solutions to the thin-film equation in the regime of weak slippage n ∈ [2, 32\11). In particular, we give sufficient conditions on the initial data for instantaneous forward motion of the free boundary. For n ∈ (2, 32\11), our estimates are sharp, for n = 2, they are sharp up to a logarithmic correction term. Note that the case n = 2 corresponds-with a grain of salt-to the assumption of the Navier slip condition at the fluid-solid interface. We also obtain results in the regime of strong slippage n ∈ (1,2); however, in this regime we expect them not to be optimal. Our method is based on weighted backward entropy estimates, Hardy's inequality and singular weight functions; we deduce a differential inequality which would enforce blowup of the weighted entropy if the contact line were to remain stationary for too long. AU - Julian Fischer ID - 1312 IS - 3 JF - Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis TI - Upper bounds on waiting times for the Thin-film equation: The case of weak slippage VL - 211 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider directed graphs where each edge is labeled with an integer weight and study the fundamental algorithmic question of computing the value of a cycle with minimum mean weight. Our contributions are twofold: (1) First we show that the algorithmic question is reducible to the problem of a logarithmic number of min-plus matrix multiplications of n×n-matrices, where n is the number of vertices of the graph. (2) Second, when the weights are nonnegative, we present the first (1+ε)-approximation algorithm for the problem and the running time of our algorithm is Õ(nωlog3(nW/ε)/ε),1 where O(nω) is the time required for the classic n×n-matrix multiplication and W is the maximum value of the weights. With an additional O(log(nW/ε)) factor in space a cycle with approximately optimal weight can be computed within the same time bound. AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Henzinger, Monika H AU - Krinninger, Sebastian AU - Loitzenbauer, Veronika AU - Raskin, Michael ID - 1375 IS - C JF - Theoretical Computer Science TI - Approximating the minimum cycle mean VL - 547 ER - TY - CONF AB - Fault-tolerant distributed algorithms play an important role in ensuring the reliability of many software applications. In this paper we consider distributed algorithms whose computations are organized in rounds. To verify the correctness of such algorithms, we reason about (i) properties (such as invariants) of the state, (ii) the transitions controlled by the algorithm, and (iii) the communication graph. We introduce a logic that addresses these points, and contains set comprehensions with cardinality constraints, function symbols to describe the local states of each process, and a limited form of quantifier alternation to express the verification conditions. We show its use in automating the verification of consensus algorithms. In particular, we give a semi-decision procedure for the unsatisfiability problem of the logic and identify a decidable fragment. We successfully applied our framework to verify the correctness of a variety of consensus algorithms tolerant to both benign faults (message loss, process crashes) and value faults (message corruption). AU - Dragoi, Cezara AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Veith, Helmut AU - Widder, Josef AU - Zufferey, Damien ID - 1392 TI - A logic-based framework for verifying consensus algorithms VL - 8318 ER - TY - CONF AB - Probabilistic programs are usual functional or imperative programs with two added constructs: (1) the ability to draw values at random from distributions, and (2) the ability to condition values of variables in a program via observations. Models from diverse application areas such as computer vision, coding theory, cryptographic protocols, biology and reliability analysis can be written as probabilistic programs. Probabilistic inference is the problem of computing an explicit representation of the probability distribution implicitly specified by a probabilistic program. Depending on the application, the desired output from inference may vary-we may want to estimate the expected value of some function f with respect to the distribution, or the mode of the distribution, or simply a set of samples drawn from the distribution. In this paper, we describe connections this research area called \Probabilistic Programming" has with programming languages and software engineering, and this includes language design, and the static and dynamic analysis of programs. We survey current state of the art and speculate on promising directions for future research. AU - Gordon, Andrew AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Nori, Aditya AU - Rajamani, Sriram ID - 1393 T2 - Proceedings of the on Future of Software Engineering TI - Probabilistic programming ER - TY - THES AB - The co-evolution of hosts and pathogens is characterized by continuous adaptations of both parties. Pathogens of social insects need to adapt towards disease defences at two levels: 1) individual immunity of each colony member consisting of behavioural defence strategies as well as humoral and cellular immune responses and 2) social immunity that is collectively performed by all group members comprising behavioural, physiological and organisational defence strategies. To disentangle the selection pressure on pathogens by the collective versus individual level of disease defence in social insects, we performed an evolution experiment using the Argentine Ant, Linepithema humile, as a host and a mixture of the general insect pathogenic fungus Metarhizium spp. (6 strains) as a pathogen. We allowed pathogen evolution over 10 serial host passages to two different evolution host treatments: (1) only individual host immunity in a single host treatment, and (2) simultaneously acting individual and social immunity in a social host treatment, in which an exposed ant was accompanied by two untreated nestmates. Before starting the pathogen evolution experiment, the 6 Metarhizium spp. strains were characterised concerning conidiospore size killing rates in singly and socially reared ants, their competitiveness under coinfecting conditions and their influence on ant behaviour. We analysed how the ancestral atrain mixture changed in conidiospere size, killing rate and strain composition dependent on host treatment (single or social hosts) during 10 passages and found that killing rate and conidiospere size of the pathogen increased under both evolution regimes, but different depending on host treatment. Testing the evolved strain mixtures that evolved under either the single or social host treatment under both single and social current rearing conditions in a full factorial design experiment revealed that the additional collective defences in insect societies add new selection pressure for their coevolving pathogens that compromise their ability to adapt to its host at the group level. To our knowledge, this is the first study directly measuring the influence of social immunity on pathogen evolution. AU - Stock, Miriam ID - 1404 TI - Evolution of a fungal pathogen towards individual versus social immunity in ants ER - TY - CONF AB - We present a rigorous derivation of the BCS gap equation for superfluid fermionic gases with point interactions. Our starting point is the BCS energy functional, whose minimizer we investigate in the limit when the range of the interaction potential goes to zero. AU - Bräunlich, Gerhard AU - Hainzl, Christian AU - Seiringer, Robert ID - 1516 T2 - Proceedings of the QMath12 Conference TI - On the BCS gap equation for superfluid fermionic gases ER - TY - JOUR AB - We propose a method for propagating edit operations in 2D vector graphics, based on geometric relationship functions. These functions quantify the geometric relationship of a point to a polygon, such as the distance to the boundary or the direction to the closest corner vertex. The level sets of the relationship functions describe points with the same relationship to a polygon. For a given query point, we first determine a set of relationships to local features, construct all level sets for these relationships, and accumulate them. The maxima of the resulting distribution are points with similar geometric relationships. We show extensions to handle mirror symmetries, and discuss the use of relationship functions as local coordinate systems. Our method can be applied, for example, to interactive floorplan editing, and it is especially useful for large layouts, where individual edits would be cumbersome. We demonstrate populating 2D layouts with tens to hundreds of objects by propagating relatively few edit operations. AU - Guerrero, Paul AU - Jeschke, Stefan AU - Wimmer, Michael AU - Wonka, Peter ID - 1629 IS - 2 JF - ACM Transactions on Graphics TI - Edit propagation using geometric relationship functions VL - 33 ER - TY - CONF AB - The Hanani–Tutte theorem is a classical result proved for the first time in the 1930s that characterizes planar graphs as graphs that admit a drawing in the plane in which every pair of edges not sharing a vertex cross an even number of times. We generalize this classical result to clustered graphs with two disjoint clusters, and show that a straightforward extension of our result to flat clustered graphs with three or more disjoint clusters is not possible. We also give a new and short proof for a related result by Di Battista and Frati based on the matroid intersection algorithm. AU - Fulek, Radoslav AU - Kynčl, Jan AU - Malinović, Igor AU - Pálvölgyi, Dömötör ID - 10793 SN - 0302-9743 T2 - International Symposium on Graph Drawing TI - Clustered planarity testing revisited VL - 8871 ER - TY - CONF AB - We extend the notion of verifiable random functions (VRF) to constrained VRFs, which generalize the concept of constrained pseudorandom functions, put forward by Boneh and Waters (Asiacrypt’13), and independently by Kiayias et al. (CCS’13) and Boyle et al. (PKC’14), who call them delegatable PRFs and functional PRFs, respectively. In a standard VRF the secret key sk allows one to evaluate a pseudorandom function at any point of its domain; in addition, it enables computation of a non-interactive proof that the function value was computed correctly. In a constrained VRF from the key sk one can derive constrained keys skS for subsets S of the domain, which allow computation of function values and proofs only at points in S. After formally defining constrained VRFs, we derive instantiations from the multilinear-maps-based constrained PRFs by Boneh and Waters, yielding a VRF with constrained keys for any set that can be decided by a polynomial-size circuit. Our VRFs have the same function values as the Boneh-Waters PRFs and are proved secure under the same hardness assumption, showing that verifiability comes at no cost. Constrained (functional) VRFs were stated as an open problem by Boyle et al. AU - Fuchsbauer, Georg ED - Abdalla, Michel ED - De Prisco, Roberto ID - 1643 T2 - SCN 2014 TI - Constrained Verifiable Random Functions VL - 8642 ER - TY - CONF AB - In this paper we present INTERHORN, a solver for recursion-free Horn clauses. The main application domain of INTERHORN lies in solving interpolation problems arising in software verification. We show how a range of interpolation problems, including path, transition, nested, state/transition and well-founded interpolation can be handled directly by INTERHORN. By detailing these interpolation problems and their Horn clause representations, we hope to encourage the emergence of a common back-end interpolation interface useful for diverse verification tools. AU - Gupta, Ashutosh AU - Popeea, Corneliu AU - Rybalchenko, Andrey ID - 1702 T2 - Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science, EPTCS TI - Generalised interpolation by solving recursion free-horn clauses VL - 169 ER - TY - CONF AB - It has been long argued that, because of inherent ambiguity and noise, the brain needs to represent uncertainty in the form of probability distributions. The neural encoding of such distributions remains however highly controversial. Here we present a novel circuit model for representing multidimensional real-valued distributions using a spike based spatio-temporal code. Our model combines the computational advantages of the currently competing models for probabilistic codes and exhibits realistic neural responses along a variety of classic measures. Furthermore, the model highlights the challenges associated with interpreting neural activity in relation to behavioral uncertainty and points to alternative population-level approaches for the experimental validation of distributed representations. AU - Savin, Cristina AU - Denève, Sophie ID - 1708 IS - January TI - Spatio-temporal representations of uncertainty in spiking neural networks VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Metal silicides formed by means of thermal annealing processes are employed as contact materials in microelectronics. Control of the structure of silicide/silicon interfaces becomes a critical issue when the characteristic size of the device is reduced below a few tens of nanometers. Here, we report on silicide clustering occurring within the channel of PtSi/Si/PtSi Schottky-barrier transistors. This phenomenon is investigated through atomistic simulations and low-temperature resonant-tunneling spectroscopy. Our results provide evidence for the segregation of a PtSi cluster with a diameter of a few nanometers from the silicide contact. The cluster acts as a metallic quantum dot giving rise to distinct signatures of quantum transport through its discrete energy states. AU - Mongillo, Massimo AU - Spathis, Panayotis N AU - Georgios Katsaros AU - De Franceschi, Silvano AU - Gentile, Pascal AU - Rurali, Riccardo AU - Cartoixà, Xavier ID - 1761 IS - 4 JF - Physical Review X TI - PtSi clustering in silicon probed by transport spectroscopy VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Acute gene inactivation using short hairpin RNA (shRNA, knockdown) in developing brain is a powerful technique to study genetic function; however, discrepancies between knockdown and knockout murine phenotypes have left unanswered questions. For example, doublecortin (Dcx) knockdown but not knockout shows a neocortical neuronal migration phenotype. Here we report that in utero electroporation of shRNA, but not siRNA or miRNA, to Dcx demonstrates a migration phenotype in Dcx knockouts akin to the effect in wild-type mice, suggestingshRNA-mediated off-target toxicity. This effect wasnot limited to Dcx, as it was observed in Dclk1 knockouts, as well as with a fraction of scrambled shRNAs, suggesting a sequence-dependent but not sequence-specific effect. Profiling RNAs from electroporated cells showed a defect in endogenous let7 miRNA levels, and disruption of let7 or Dicer recapitulated the migration defect. The results suggest that shRNA-mediated knockdown can produce untoward migration effects by altering endogenous miRNA pathways. AU - Baek, SeungTae AU - Kerjan, Géraldine AU - Bielas, Stephanie L AU - Lee, Jieun AU - Fenstermaker, Ali G AU - Gaia Novarino AU - Gleeson, Joseph G ID - 1791 IS - 6 JF - Neuron TI - Off-target effect of doublecortin family shRNA on neuronal migration associated with endogenous MicroRNA dysregulation VL - 82 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The generation of asymmetry, at both cellular and tissue level, is one of the most essential capabilities of all eukaryotic organisms. It mediates basically all multicellular development ranging from embryogenesis and de novo organ formation till responses to various environmental stimuli. In plants, the awe-inspiring number of such processes is regulated by phytohormone auxin and its directional, cell-to-cell transport. The mediators of this transport, PIN auxin transporters, are asymmetrically localized at the plasma membrane, and this polar localization determines the directionality of intercellular auxin flow. Thus, auxin transport contributes crucially to the generation of local auxin gradients or maxima, which instruct given cell to change its developmental program. Here, we introduce and discuss the molecular components and cellular mechanisms regulating the generation and maintenance of cellular PIN polarity, as the general hallmarks of cell polarity in plants. AU - Baster, Pawel AU - Friml, Jiří ED - Zažímalová, Eva ED - Petrášek, Jan ED - Benková, Eva ID - 1806 T2 - Auxin and Its Role in Plant Development TI - Auxin on the road navigated by cellular PIN polarity ER - TY - JOUR AB - Watermarking techniques for vector graphics dislocate vertices in order to embed imperceptible, yet detectable, statistical features into the input data. The embedding process may result in a change of the topology of the input data, e.g., by introducing self-intersections, which is undesirable or even disastrous for many applications. In this paper we present a watermarking framework for two-dimensional vector graphics that employs conventional watermarking techniques but still provides the guarantee that the topology of the input data is preserved. The geometric part of this framework computes so-called maximum perturbation regions (MPR) of vertices. We propose two efficient algorithms to compute MPRs based on Voronoi diagrams and constrained triangulations. Furthermore, we present two algorithms to conditionally correct the watermarked data in order to increase the watermark embedding capacity and still guarantee topological correctness. While we focus on the watermarking of input formed by straight-line segments, one of our approaches can also be extended to circular arcs. We conclude the paper by demonstrating and analyzing the applicability of our framework in conjunction with two well-known watermarking techniques. AU - Huber, Stefan AU - Held, Martin AU - Meerwald, Peter AU - Kwitt, Roland ID - 1816 IS - 1 JF - International Journal of Computational Geometry and Applications TI - Topology-preserving watermarking of vector graphics VL - 24 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We review recent progress towards a rigorous understanding of the Bogoliubov approximation for bosonic quantum many-body systems. We focus, in particular, on the excitation spectrum of a Bose gas in the mean-field (Hartree) limit. A list of open problems will be discussed at the end. AU - Seiringer, Robert ID - 1821 IS - 7 JF - Journal of Mathematical Physics TI - Bose gases, Bose-Einstein condensation, and the Bogoliubov approximation VL - 55 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Jakšić, Vojkan AU - Pillet, Claude AU - Seiringer, Robert ID - 1822 IS - 7 JF - Journal of Mathematical Physics TI - Introduction VL - 55 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Hitting and batting tasks, such as tennis forehands, ping-pong strokes, or baseball batting, depend on predictions where the ball can be intercepted and how it can properly be returned to the opponent. These predictions get more accurate over time, hence the behaviors need to be continuously modified. As a result, movement templates with a learned global shape need to be adapted during the execution so that the racket reaches a target position and velocity that will return the ball over to the other side of the net or court. It requires altering learned movements to hit a varying target with the necessary velocity at a specific instant in time. Such a task cannot be incorporated straightforwardly in most movement representations suitable for learning. For example, the standard formulation of the dynamical system based motor primitives (introduced by Ijspeert et al (2002b)) does not satisfy this property despite their flexibility which has allowed learning tasks ranging from locomotion to kendama. In order to fulfill this requirement, we reformulate the Ijspeert framework to incorporate the possibility of specifying a desired hitting point and a desired hitting velocity while maintaining all advantages of the original formulation.We show that the proposed movement template formulation works well in two scenarios, i.e., for hitting a ball on a string with a table tennis racket at a specified velocity and for returning balls launched by a ball gun successfully over the net using forehand movements. AU - Muelling, Katharina AU - Kroemer, Oliver AU - Lampert, Christoph AU - Schölkopf, Bernhard ED - Kober, Jens ED - Peters, Jan ID - 1829 T2 - Learning Motor Skills TI - Movement templates for learning of hitting and batting VL - 97 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Local protein interactions ("molecular context" effects) dictate amino acid replacements and can be described in terms of site-specific, energetic preferences for any different amino acid. It has been recently debated whether these preferences remain approximately constant during evolution or whether, due to coevolution of sites, they change strongly. Such research highlights an unresolved and fundamental issue with far-reaching implications for phylogenetic analysis and molecular evolution modeling. Here, we take advantage of the recent availability of phenotypically supported laboratory resurrections of Precambrian thioredoxins and β-lactamases to experimentally address the change of site-specific amino acid preferences over long geological timescales. Extensive mutational analyses support the notion that evolutionary adjustment to a new amino acid may occur, but to a large extent this is insufficient to erase the primitive preference for amino acid replacements. Generally, site-specific amino acid preferences appear to remain conserved throughout evolutionary history despite local sequence divergence. We show such preference conservation to be readily understandable in molecular terms and we provide crystallographic evidence for an intriguing structural-switch mechanism: Energetic preference for an ancestral amino acid in a modern protein can be linked to reorganization upon mutation to the ancestral local structure around the mutated site. Finally, we point out that site-specific preference conservation naturally leads to one plausible evolutionary explanation for the existence of intragenic global suppressor mutations. AU - Risso, Valeria AU - Manssour Triedo, Fadia AU - Delgado Delgado, Asuncion AU - Arco, Rocio AU - Barroso Deljesús, Alicia AU - Inglés Prieto, Álvaro AU - Godoy Ruiz, Raquel AU - Gavira, Josè AU - Gaucher, Eric AU - Ibarra Molero, Beatriz AU - Sánchez Ruiz, Jose ID - 1844 IS - 2 JF - Molecular Biology and Evolution TI - Mutational studies on resurrected ancestral proteins reveal conservation of site-specific amino acid preferences throughout evolutionary history VL - 32 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We prove polynomial upper bounds of geometric Ramsey numbers of pathwidth-2 outerplanar triangulations in both convex and general cases. We also prove that the geometric Ramsey numbers of the ladder graph on 2n vertices are bounded by O(n3) and O(n10), in the convex and general case, respectively. We then apply similar methods to prove an (Formula presented.) upper bound on the Ramsey number of a path with n ordered vertices. AU - Cibulka, Josef AU - Gao, Pu AU - Krcál, Marek AU - Valla, Tomáš AU - Valtr, Pavel ID - 1842 IS - 1 JF - Discrete & Computational Geometry TI - On the geometric ramsey number of outerplanar graphs VL - 53 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this paper, we present a method for non-rigid, partial shape matching in vector graphics. Given a user-specified query region in a 2D shape, similar regions are found, even if they are non-linearly distorted. Furthermore, a non-linear mapping is established between the query regions and these matches, which allows the automatic transfer of editing operations such as texturing. This is achieved by a two-step approach. First, pointwise correspondences between the query region and the whole shape are established. The transformation parameters of these correspondences are registered in an appropriate transformation space. For transformations between similar regions, these parameters form surfaces in transformation space, which are extracted in the second step of our method. The extracted regions may be related to the query region by a non-rigid transform, enabling non-rigid shape matching. In this paper, we present a method for non-rigid, partial shape matching in vector graphics. Given a user-specified query region in a 2D shape, similar regions are found, even if they are non-linearly distorted. Furthermore, a non-linear mapping is established between the query regions and these matches, which allows the automatic transfer of editing operations such as texturing. This is achieved by a two-step approach. First, pointwise correspondences between the query region and the whole shape are established. The transformation parameters of these correspondences are registered in an appropriate transformation space. For transformations between similar regions, these parameters form surfaces in transformation space, which are extracted in the second step of our method. The extracted regions may be related to the query region by a non-rigid transform, enabling non-rigid shape matching. AU - Guerrero, Paul AU - Auzinger, Thomas AU - Wimmer, Michael AU - Jeschke, Stefan ID - 1854 IS - 1 JF - Computer Graphics Forum TI - Partial shape matching using transformation parameter similarity VL - 34 ER - TY - JOUR AB - To control morphogenesis, molecular regulatory networks have to interfere with the mechanical properties of the individual cells of developing organs and tissues, but how this is achieved is not well known. We study this issue here in the shoot meristem of higher plants, a group of undifferentiated cells where complex changes in growth rates and directions lead to the continuous formation of new organs [1, 2]. Here, we show that the plant hormone auxin plays an important role in this process via a dual, local effect on the extracellular matrix, the cell wall, which determines cell shape. Our study reveals that auxin not only causes a limited reduction in wall stiffness but also directly interferes with wall anisotropy via the regulation of cortical microtubule dynamics. We further show that to induce growth isotropy and organ outgrowth, auxin somehow interferes with the cortical microtubule-ordering activity of a network of proteins, including AUXIN BINDING PROTEIN 1 and KATANIN 1. Numerical simulations further indicate that the induced isotropy is sufficient to amplify the effects of the relatively minor changes in wall stiffness to promote organogenesis and the establishment of new growth axes in a robust manner. AU - Sassi, Massimiliano AU - Ali, Olivier AU - Boudon, Frédéric AU - Cloarec, Gladys AU - Abad, Ursula AU - Cellier, Coralie AU - Chen, Xu AU - Gilles, Benjamin AU - Milani, Pascale AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Vernoux, Teva AU - Godin, Christophe AU - Hamant, Olivier AU - Traas, Jan ID - 1852 IS - 19 JF - Current Biology TI - An auxin-mediated shift toward growth isotropy promotes organ formation at the shoot meristem in Arabidopsis VL - 24 ER - TY - CONF AB - Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) composed of low-power, low-cost sensor nodes are expected to form the backbone of future intelligent networks for a broad range of civil, industrial and military applications. These sensor nodes are often deployed through random spreading, and function in dynamic environments. Many applications of WSNs such as pollution tracking, forest fire detection, and military surveillance require knowledge of the location of constituent nodes. But the use of technologies such as GPS on all nodes is prohibitive due to power and cost constraints. So, the sensor nodes need to autonomously determine their locations. Most localization techniques use anchor nodes with known locations to determine the position of remaining nodes. Localization techniques have two conflicting requirements. On one hand, an ideal localization technique should be computationally simple and on the other hand, it must be resistant to attacks that compromise anchor nodes. In this paper, we propose a computationally light-weight game theoretic secure localization technique and demonstrate its effectiveness in comparison to existing techniques. AU - Jha, Susmit AU - Tripakis, Stavros AU - Seshia, Sanjit AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu ID - 1853 TI - Game theoretic secure localization in wireless sensor networks ER - TY - JOUR AB - The prominent and evolutionarily ancient role of the plant hormone auxin is the regulation of cell expansion. Cell expansion requires ordered arrangement of the cytoskeleton but molecular mechanisms underlying its regulation by signalling molecules including auxin are unknown. Here we show in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana that in elongating cells exogenous application of auxin or redistribution of endogenous auxin induces very rapid microtubule re-orientation from transverse to longitudinal, coherent with the inhibition of cell expansion. This fast auxin effect requires auxin binding protein 1 (ABP1) and involves a contribution of downstream signalling components such as ROP6 GTPase, ROP-interactive protein RIC1 and the microtubule-severing protein katanin. These components are required for rapid auxin-and ABP1-mediated re-orientation of microtubules to regulate cell elongation in roots and dark-grown hypocotyls as well as asymmetric growth during gravitropic responses. AU - Chen, Xu AU - Grandont, Laurie AU - Li, Hongjiang AU - Hauschild, Robert AU - Paque, Sébastien AU - Abuzeineh, Anas AU - Rakusova, Hana AU - Benková, Eva AU - Perrot Rechenmann, Catherine AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1862 IS - 729 JF - Nature SN - 0028-0836 TI - Inhibition of cell expansion by rapid ABP1-mediated auxin effect on microtubules VL - 516 ER - TY - CONF AB - Boolean controllers for systems with complex datapaths are often very difficult to implement correctly, in particular when concurrency is involved. Yet, in many instances it is easy to formally specify correctness. For example, the specification for the controller of a pipelined processor only has to state that the pipelined processor gives the same results as a non-pipelined reference design. This makes such controllers a good target for automated synthesis. However, an efficient abstraction for the complex datapath elements is needed, as a bit-precise description is often infeasible. We present Suraq, the first controller synthesis tool which uses uninterpreted functions for the abstraction. Quantified firstorder formulas (with specific quantifier structure) serve as the specification language from which Suraq synthesizes Boolean controllers. Suraq transforms the specification into an unsatisfiable SMT formula, and uses Craig interpolation to compute its results. Using Suraq, we were able to synthesize a controller (consisting of two Boolean signals) for a five-stage pipelined DLX processor in roughly one hour and 15 minutes. AU - Hofferek, Georg AU - Gupta, Ashutosh ED - Yahav, Eran ID - 1869 T2 - HVC 2014 TI - Suraq - a controller synthesis tool using uninterpreted functions VL - 8855 ER - TY - CONF AB - Extensionality axioms are common when reasoning about data collections, such as arrays and functions in program analysis, or sets in mathematics. An extensionality axiom asserts that two collections are equal if they consist of the same elements at the same indices. Using extensionality is often required to show that two collections are equal. A typical example is the set theory theorem (∀x)(∀y)x∪y = y ∪x. Interestingly, while humans have no problem with proving such set identities using extensionality, they are very hard for superposition theorem provers because of the calculi they use. In this paper we show how addition of a new inference rule, called extensionality resolution, allows first-order theorem provers to easily solve problems no modern first-order theorem prover can solve. We illustrate this by running the VAMPIRE theorem prover with extensionality resolution on a number of set theory and array problems. Extensionality resolution helps VAMPIRE to solve problems from the TPTP library of first-order problems that were never solved before by any prover. AU - Gupta, Ashutosh AU - Kovács, Laura AU - Kragl, Bernhard AU - Voronkov, Andrei ED - Cassez, Franck ED - Raskin, Jean-François ID - 1872 T2 - ATVA 2014 TI - Extensional crisis and proving identity VL - 8837 ER - TY - CONF AB - We investigate the problem of checking if a finite-state transducer is robust to uncertainty in its input. Our notion of robustness is based on the analytic notion of Lipschitz continuity - a transducer is K-(Lipschitz) robust if the perturbation in its output is at most K times the perturbation in its input. We quantify input and output perturbation using similarity functions. We show that K-robustness is undecidable even for deterministic transducers. We identify a class of functional transducers, which admits a polynomial time automata-theoretic decision procedure for K-robustness. This class includes Mealy machines and functional letter-to-letter transducers. We also study K-robustness of nondeterministic transducers. Since a nondeterministic transducer generates a set of output words for each input word, we quantify output perturbation using setsimilarity functions. We show that K-robustness of nondeterministic transducers is undecidable, even for letter-to-letter transducers. We identify a class of set-similarity functions which admit decidable K-robustness of letter-to-letter transducers. AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Otop, Jan AU - Samanta, Roopsha ID - 1870 T2 - Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics, LIPIcs TI - Lipschitz robustness of finite-state transducers VL - 29 ER -