@article{659,
  abstract     = {Migration frequently involves Rac-mediated protrusion of lamellipodia, formed by Arp2/3 complex-dependent branching thought to be crucial for force generation and stability of these networks. The formins FMNL2 and FMNL3 are Cdc42 effectors targeting to the lamellipodium tip and shown here to nucleate and elongate actin filaments with complementary activities in vitro. In migrating B16-F1 melanoma cells, both formins contribute to the velocity of lamellipodium protrusion. Loss of FMNL2/3 function in melanoma cells and fibroblasts reduces lamellipodial width, actin filament density and -bundling, without changing patterns of Arp2/3 complex incorporation. Strikingly, in melanoma cells, FMNL2/3 gene inactivation almost completely abolishes protrusion forces exerted by lamellipodia and modifies their ultrastructural organization. Consistently, CRISPR/Cas-mediated depletion of FMNL2/3 in fibroblasts reduces both migration and capability of cells to move against viscous media. Together, we conclude that force generation in lamellipodia strongly depends on FMNL formin activity, operating in addition to Arp2/3 complex-dependent filament branching.},
  author       = {Kage, Frieda and Winterhoff, Moritz and Dimchev, Vanessa and Müller, Jan and Thalheim, Tobias and Freise, Anika and Brühmann, Stefan and Kollasser, Jana and Block, Jennifer and Dimchev, Georgi A and Geyer, Matthias and Schnittler, Hams and Brakebusch, Cord and Stradal, Theresia and Carlier, Marie and Sixt, Michael K and Käs, Josef and Faix, Jan and Rottner, Klemens},
  issn         = {20411723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Nature Publishing Group},
  title        = {{FMNL formins boost lamellipodial force generation}},
  doi          = {10.1038/ncomms14832},
  volume       = {8},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{660,
  abstract     = {Growing microtubules are protected from depolymerization by the presence of a GTP or GDP/Pi cap. End-binding proteins of the EB1 family bind to the stabilizing cap, allowing monitoring of its size in real time. The cap size has been shown to correlate with instantaneous microtubule stability. Here we have quantitatively characterized the properties of cap size fluctuations during steadystate growth and have developed a theory predicting their timescale and amplitude from the kinetics of microtubule growth and cap maturation. In contrast to growth speed fluctuations, cap size fluctuations show a characteristic timescale, which is defined by the lifetime of the cap sites. Growth fluctuations affect the amplitude of cap size fluctuations; however, cap size does not affect growth speed, indicating that microtubules are far from instability during most of their time of growth. Our theory provides the basis for a quantitative understanding of microtubule stability fluctuations during steady-state growth.},
  author       = {Rickman, Jamie and Düllberg, Christian F and Cade, Nicholas and Griffin, Lewis and Surrey, Thomas},
  issn         = {00278424},
  journal      = {PNAS},
  number       = {13},
  pages        = {3427 -- 3432},
  publisher    = {National Academy of Sciences},
  title        = {{Steady state EB cap size fluctuations are determined by stochastic microtubule growth and maturation}},
  doi          = {10.1073/pnas.1620274114},
  volume       = {114},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{661,
  abstract     = {During embryonic development, mechanical forces are essential for cellular rearrangements driving tissue morphogenesis. Here, we show that in the early zebrafish embryo, friction forces are generated at the interface between anterior axial mesoderm (prechordal plate, ppl) progenitors migrating towards the animal pole and neurectoderm progenitors moving in the opposite direction towards the vegetal pole of the embryo. These friction forces lead to global rearrangement of cells within the neurectoderm and determine the position of the neural anlage. Using a combination of experiments and simulations, we show that this process depends on hydrodynamic coupling between neurectoderm and ppl as a result of E-cadherin-mediated adhesion between those tissues. Our data thus establish the emergence of friction forces at the interface between moving tissues as a critical force-generating process shaping the embryo.},
  author       = {Smutny, Michael and Ákos, Zsuzsa and Grigolon, Silvia and Shamipour, Shayan and Ruprecht, Verena and Capek, Daniel and Behrndt, Martin and Papusheva, Ekaterina and Tada, Masazumi and Hof, Björn and Vicsek, Tamás and Salbreux, Guillaume and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J},
  issn         = {14657392},
  journal      = {Nature Cell Biology},
  pages        = {306 -- 317},
  publisher    = {Nature Publishing Group},
  title        = {{Friction forces position the neural anlage}},
  doi          = {10.1038/ncb3492},
  volume       = {19},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1433,
  abstract     = {Phat is an open-source C. ++ library for the computation of persistent homology by matrix reduction, targeted towards developers of software for topological data analysis. We aim for a simple generic design that decouples algorithms from data structures without sacrificing efficiency or user-friendliness. We provide numerous different reduction strategies as well as data types to store and manipulate the boundary matrix. We compare the different combinations through extensive experimental evaluation and identify optimization techniques that work well in practical situations. We also compare our software with various other publicly available libraries for persistent homology.},
  author       = {Bauer, Ulrich and Kerber, Michael and Reininghaus, Jan and Wagner, Hubert},
  issn         = { 07477171},
  journal      = {Journal of Symbolic Computation},
  pages        = {76 -- 90},
  publisher    = {Academic Press},
  title        = {{Phat - Persistent homology algorithms toolbox}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.jsc.2016.03.008},
  volume       = {78},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1528,
  abstract     = {We consider N×N Hermitian random matrices H consisting of blocks of size M≥N6/7. The matrix elements are i.i.d. within the blocks, close to a Gaussian in the four moment matching sense, but their distribution varies from block to block to form a block-band structure, with an essential band width M. We show that the entries of the Green’s function G(z)=(H−z)−1 satisfy the local semicircle law with spectral parameter z=E+iη down to the real axis for any η≫N−1, using a combination of the supersymmetry method inspired by Shcherbina (J Stat Phys 155(3): 466–499, 2014) and the Green’s function comparison strategy. Previous estimates were valid only for η≫M−1. The new estimate also implies that the eigenvectors in the middle of the spectrum are fully delocalized.},
  author       = {Bao, Zhigang and Erdös, László},
  issn         = {01788051},
  journal      = {Probability Theory and Related Fields},
  number       = {3-4},
  pages        = {673 -- 776},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Delocalization for a class of random block band matrices}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00440-015-0692-y},
  volume       = {167},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{13160,
  abstract     = {Transforming deterministic ω
-automata into deterministic parity automata is traditionally done using variants of appearance records. We present a more efficient variant of this approach, tailored to Rabin automata, and several optimizations applicable to all appearance records. We compare the methods experimentally and find out that our method produces smaller automata than previous approaches. Moreover, the experiments demonstrate the potential of our method for LTL synthesis, using LTL-to-Rabin translators. It leads to significantly smaller parity automata when compared to state-of-the-art approaches on complex formulae.},
  author       = {Kretinsky, Jan and Meggendorfer, Tobias and Waldmann, Clara and Weininger, Maximilian},
  booktitle    = {Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems},
  isbn         = {9783662545768},
  issn         = {1611-3349},
  location     = {Uppsala, Sweden},
  pages        = {443--460},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Index appearance record for transforming Rabin automata into parity automata}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-662-54577-5_26},
  volume       = {10205},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1336,
  abstract     = {Evolutionary algorithms (EAs) form a popular optimisation paradigm inspired by natural evolution. In recent years the field of evolutionary computation has developed a rigorous analytical theory to analyse the runtimes of EAs on many illustrative problems. Here we apply this theory to a simple model of natural evolution. In the Strong Selection Weak Mutation (SSWM) evolutionary regime the time between occurrences of new mutations is much longer than the time it takes for a mutated genotype to take over the population. In this situation, the population only contains copies of one genotype and evolution can be modelled as a stochastic process evolving one genotype by means of mutation and selection between the resident and the mutated genotype. The probability of accepting the mutated genotype then depends on the change in fitness. We study this process, SSWM, from an algorithmic perspective, quantifying its expected optimisation time for various parameters and investigating differences to a similar evolutionary algorithm, the well-known (1+1) EA. We show that SSWM can have a moderate advantage over the (1+1) EA at crossing fitness valleys and study an example where SSWM outperforms the (1+1) EA by taking advantage of information on the fitness gradient.},
  author       = {Paixao, Tiago and Pérez Heredia, Jorge and Sudholt, Dirk and Trubenova, Barbora},
  issn         = {01784617},
  journal      = {Algorithmica},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {681 -- 713},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Towards a runtime comparison of natural and artificial evolution}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00453-016-0212-1},
  volume       = {78},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1337,
  abstract     = {We consider the local eigenvalue distribution of large self-adjoint N×N random matrices H=H∗ with centered independent entries. In contrast to previous works the matrix of variances sij=\mathbbmE|hij|2 is not assumed to be stochastic. Hence the density of states is not the Wigner semicircle law. Its possible shapes are described in the companion paper (Ajanki et al. in Quadratic Vector Equations on the Complex Upper Half Plane. arXiv:1506.05095). We show that as N grows, the resolvent, G(z)=(H−z)−1, converges to a diagonal matrix, diag(m(z)), where m(z)=(m1(z),…,mN(z)) solves the vector equation −1/mi(z)=z+∑jsijmj(z) that has been analyzed in Ajanki et al. (Quadratic Vector Equations on the Complex Upper Half Plane. arXiv:1506.05095). We prove a local law down to the smallest spectral resolution scale, and bulk universality for both real symmetric and complex hermitian symmetry classes.},
  author       = {Ajanki, Oskari H and Erdös, László and Krüger, Torben H},
  issn         = {01788051},
  journal      = {Probability Theory and Related Fields},
  number       = {3-4},
  pages        = {667 -- 727},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Universality for general Wigner-type matrices}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00440-016-0740-2},
  volume       = {169},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1338,
  abstract     = {We present a computer-aided programming approach to concurrency. The approach allows programmers to program assuming a friendly, non-preemptive scheduler, and our synthesis procedure inserts synchronization to ensure that the final program works even with a preemptive scheduler. The correctness specification is implicit, inferred from the non-preemptive behavior. Let us consider sequences of calls that the program makes to an external interface. The specification requires that any such sequence produced under a preemptive scheduler should be included in the set of sequences produced under a non-preemptive scheduler. We guarantee that our synthesis does not introduce deadlocks and that the synchronization inserted is optimal w.r.t. a given objective function. The solution is based on a finitary abstraction, an algorithm for bounded language inclusion modulo an independence relation, and generation of a set of global constraints over synchronization placements. Each model of the global constraints set corresponds to a correctness-ensuring synchronization placement. The placement that is optimal w.r.t. the given objective function is chosen as the synchronization solution. We apply the approach to device-driver programming, where the driver threads call the software interface of the device and the API provided by the operating system. Our experiments demonstrate that our synthesis method is precise and efficient. The implicit specification helped us find one concurrency bug previously missed when model-checking using an explicit, user-provided specification. We implemented objective functions for coarse-grained and fine-grained locking and observed that different synchronization placements are produced for our experiments, favoring a minimal number of synchronization operations or maximum concurrency, respectively.},
  author       = {Cerny, Pavol and Clarke, Edmund and Henzinger, Thomas A and Radhakrishna, Arjun and Ryzhyk, Leonid and Samanta, Roopsha and Tarrach, Thorsten},
  journal      = {Formal Methods in System Design},
  number       = {2-3},
  pages        = {97 -- 139},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{From non-preemptive to preemptive scheduling using synchronization synthesis}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s10703-016-0256-5},
  volume       = {50},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1351,
  abstract     = {The behaviour of gene regulatory networks (GRNs) is typically analysed using simulation-based statistical testing-like methods. In this paper, we demonstrate that we can replace this approach by a formal verification-like method that gives higher assurance and scalability. We focus on Wagner’s weighted GRN model with varying weights, which is used in evolutionary biology. In the model, weight parameters represent the gene interaction strength that may change due to genetic mutations. For a property of interest, we synthesise the constraints over the parameter space that represent the set of GRNs satisfying the property. We experimentally show that our parameter synthesis procedure computes the mutational robustness of GRNs—an important problem of interest in evolutionary biology—more efficiently than the classical simulation method. We specify the property in linear temporal logic. We employ symbolic bounded model checking and SMT solving to compute the space of GRNs that satisfy the property, which amounts to synthesizing a set of linear constraints on the weights.},
  author       = {Giacobbe, Mirco and Guet, Calin C and Gupta, Ashutosh and Henzinger, Thomas A and Paixao, Tiago and Petrov, Tatjana},
  issn         = {00015903},
  journal      = {Acta Informatica},
  number       = {8},
  pages        = {765 -- 787},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Model checking the evolution of gene regulatory networks}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00236-016-0278-x},
  volume       = {54},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1367,
  abstract     = {One of the major challenges in physically based modelling is making simulations efficient. Adaptive models provide an essential solution to these efficiency goals. These models are able to self-adapt in space and time, attempting to provide the best possible compromise between accuracy and speed. This survey reviews the adaptive solutions proposed so far in computer graphics. Models are classified according to the strategy they use for adaptation, from time-stepping and freezing techniques to geometric adaptivity in the form of structured grids, meshes and particles. Applications range from fluids, through deformable bodies, to articulated solids.},
  author       = {Manteaux, Pierre and Wojtan, Christopher J and Narain, Rahul and Redon, Stéphane and Faure, François and Cani, Marie},
  issn         = {01677055},
  journal      = {Computer Graphics Forum},
  number       = {6},
  pages        = {312 -- 337},
  publisher    = {Wiley-Blackwell},
  title        = {{Adaptive physically based models in computer graphics}},
  doi          = {10.1111/cgf.12941},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1407,
  abstract     = {We consider the problem of computing the set of initial states of a dynamical system such that there exists a control strategy to ensure that the trajectories satisfy a temporal logic specification with probability 1 (almost-surely). We focus on discrete-time, stochastic linear dynamics and specifications given as formulas of the Generalized Reactivity(1) fragment of Linear Temporal Logic over linear predicates in the states of the system. We propose a solution based on iterative abstraction-refinement, and turn-based 2-player probabilistic games. While the theoretical guarantee of our algorithm after any finite number of iterations is only a partial solution, we show that if our algorithm terminates, then the result is the set of all satisfying initial states. Moreover, for any (partial) solution our algorithm synthesizes witness control strategies to ensure almost-sure satisfaction of the temporal logic specification. While the proposed algorithm guarantees progress and soundness in every iteration, it is computationally demanding. We offer an alternative, more efficient solution for the reachability properties that decomposes the problem into a series of smaller problems of the same type. All algorithms are demonstrated on an illustrative case study.},
  author       = {Svoreňová, Mária and Kretinsky, Jan and Chmelik, Martin and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Cěrná, Ivana and Belta, Cǎlin},
  journal      = {Nonlinear Analysis: Hybrid Systems},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {230 -- 253},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Temporal logic control for stochastic linear systems using abstraction refinement of probabilistic games}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.nahs.2016.04.006},
  volume       = {23},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{14205,
  abstract     = {Two of the most fundamental prototypes of greedy optimization are the matching pursuit and Frank-Wolfe algorithms. In this paper, we take a unified view on both classes of methods, leading to the first explicit convergence rates of matching pursuit methods in an optimization sense, for general sets of atoms. We derive sublinear (1/t) convergence for both classes on general smooth objectives, and linear convergence on strongly convex objectives, as well as a clear correspondence of algorithm variants. Our presented algorithms and rates are affine invariant, and do not need any incoherence or sparsity assumptions.},
  author       = {Locatello, Francesco and Khanna, Rajiv and Tschannen, Michael and Jaggi, Martin},
  booktitle    = {Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Statistics},
  location     = {Fort Lauderdale, FL, United States},
  pages        = {860--868},
  publisher    = {ML Research Press},
  title        = {{A unified optimization view on generalized matching pursuit and Frank-Wolfe}},
  volume       = {54},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{14206,
  abstract     = {Greedy optimization methods such as Matching Pursuit (MP) and Frank-Wolfe (FW) algorithms regained popularity in recent years due to their simplicity, effectiveness and theoretical guarantees. MP and FW address optimization over the linear span and the convex hull of a set of atoms, respectively. In this paper, we consider the intermediate case of optimization over the convex cone, parametrized as the conic hull of a generic atom set, leading to the first principled definitions of non-negative MP algorithms for which we give explicit convergence rates and demonstrate excellent empirical performance. In particular, we derive sublinear (O(1/t)) convergence on general smooth and convex objectives, and linear convergence (O(e−t)) on strongly convex objectives, in both cases for general sets of atoms. Furthermore, we establish a clear correspondence of our algorithms to known algorithms from the MP and FW literature. Our novel algorithms and analyses target general atom sets and general objective functions, and hence are directly applicable to a large variety of learning settings.},
  author       = {Locatello, Francesco and Tschannen, Michael and Rätsch, Gunnar and Jaggi, Martin},
  booktitle    = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
  isbn         = {9781510860964},
  location     = {Long Beach, CA, United States},
  title        = {{Greedy algorithms for cone constrained optimization with convergence guarantees}},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{909,
  abstract     = {We study the lengths of curves passing through a fixed number of points on the boundary of a convex shape in the plane. We show that, for any convex shape K, there exist four points on the boundary of K such that the length of any curve passing through these points is at least half of the perimeter of K. It is also shown that the same statement does not remain valid with the additional constraint that the points are extreme points of K. Moreover, the factor &amp;#xbd; cannot be achieved with any fixed number of extreme points. We conclude the paper with a few other inequalities related to the perimeter of a convex shape.},
  author       = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Vysotsky, Vladislav},
  issn         = {00029890},
  journal      = {The American Mathematical Monthly},
  number       = {7},
  pages        = {588 -- 596},
  publisher    = {Mathematical Association of America},
  title        = {{On the lengths of curves passing through boundary points of a planar convex shape}},
  doi          = {10.4169/amer.math.monthly.124.7.588},
  volume       = {124},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{910,
  abstract     = {Frequency-independent selection is generally considered as a force that acts to reduce the genetic variation in evolving populations, yet rigorous arguments for this idea are scarce. When selection fluctuates in time, it is unclear whether frequency-independent selection may maintain genetic polymorphism without invoking additional mechanisms. We show that constant frequency-independent selection with arbitrary epistasis on a well-mixed haploid population eliminates genetic variation if we assume linkage equilibrium between alleles. To this end, we introduce the notion of frequency-independent selection at the level of alleles, which is sufficient to prove our claim and contains the notion of frequency-independent selection on haploids. When selection and recombination are weak but of the same order, there may be strong linkage disequilibrium; numerical calculations show that stable equilibria are highly unlikely. Using the example of a diallelic two-locus model, we then demonstrate that frequency-independent selection that fluctuates in time can maintain stable polymorphism if linkage disequilibrium changes its sign periodically. We put our findings in the context of results from the existing literature and point out those scenarios in which the possible role of frequency-independent selection in maintaining genetic variation remains unclear.
},
  author       = {Novak, Sebastian and Barton, Nicholas H},
  journal      = {Genetics},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {653 -- 668},
  publisher    = {Genetics Society of America},
  title        = {{When does frequency-independent selection maintain genetic variation?}},
  doi          = {10.1534/genetics.117.300129},
  volume       = {207},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{911,
  abstract     = {We develop a probabilistic technique for colorizing grayscale natural images. In light of the intrinsic uncertainty of this task, the proposed probabilistic framework has numerous desirable properties. In particular, our model is able to produce multiple plausible and vivid colorizations for a given grayscale image and is one of the first colorization models to provide a proper stochastic sampling scheme. Moreover, our training procedure is supported by a rigorous theoretical framework that does not require any ad hoc heuristics and allows for efficient modeling and learning of the joint pixel color distribution.We demonstrate strong quantitative and qualitative experimental results on the CIFAR-10 dataset and the challenging ILSVRC 2012 dataset.},
  author       = {Royer, Amélie and Kolesnikov, Alexander and Lampert, Christoph},
  location     = {London, United Kingdom},
  pages        = {85.1--85.12},
  publisher    = {BMVA Press},
  title        = {{Probabilistic image colorization}},
  doi          = {10.5244/c.31.85},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{912,
  abstract     = {We consider a many-body system of fermionic atoms interacting via a local pair potential and subject to an external potential within the framework of Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory. We measure the free energy of the whole sample with respect to the free energy of a reference state which allows us to define a BCS functional with boundary conditions at infinity. Our main result is a lower bound for this energy functional in terms of expressions that typically appear in Ginzburg-Landau functionals.
},
  author       = {Deuchert, Andreas},
  issn         = {00222488},
  journal      = { Journal of Mathematical Physics},
  number       = {8},
  publisher    = {AIP Publishing},
  title        = {{A lower bound for the BCS functional with boundary conditions at infinity}},
  doi          = {10.1063/1.4996580},
  volume       = {58},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{914,
  abstract     = {Infections with potentially lethal pathogens may negatively affect an individual’s lifespan and decrease its reproductive value. The terminal investment hypothesis predicts that individuals faced with a reduced survival should invest more into reproduction instead of maintenance and growth. Several studies suggest that individuals are indeed able to estimate their body condition and to increase their reproductive effort with approaching death, while other studies gave ambiguous results. We investigate whether queens of a perennial social insect (ant) are able to boost their reproduction following infection with an obligate killing pathogen. Social insect queens are special with regard to reproduction and aging, as they outlive conspecific non-reproductive workers. Moreover, in the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior, fecundity increases with queen age. However, it remained unclear whether this reflects negative reproductive senescence or terminal investment in response to approaching death. Here, we test whether queens of C. obscurior react to infection with the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium brunneum by an increased egg-laying rate. We show that a fungal infection triggers a reinforced investment in reproduction in queens. This adjustment of the reproductive rate by ant queens is consistent with predictions of the terminal investment hypothesis and is reported for the first time in a social insect.},
  author       = {Giehr, Julia and Grasse, Anna V and Cremer, Sylvia and Heinze, Jürgen and Schrempf, Alexandra},
  issn         = {20545703},
  journal      = {Royal Society Open Science},
  number       = {7},
  publisher    = {Royal Society, The},
  title        = {{Ant queens increase their reproductive efforts after pathogen infection}},
  doi          = {10.1098/rsos.170547},
  volume       = {4},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{915,
  abstract     = {We propose a dual decomposition and linear program relaxation of the NP-hard minimum cost multicut problem. Unlike other polyhedral relaxations of the multicut polytope, it is amenable to efficient optimization by message passing. Like other polyhedral relaxations, it can be tightened efficiently by cutting planes.  We define an algorithm that alternates between message passing and efficient separation of cycle- and odd-wheel inequalities. This algorithm is more efficient than state-of-the-art algorithms based on linear programming, including algorithms written in the framework of leading commercial software, as we show in experiments with large instances of the problem from applications in computer vision, biomedical image analysis and data mining.},
  author       = {Swoboda, Paul and Andres, Bjoern},
  isbn         = {978-153860457-1},
  location     = {Honolulu, HA, United States},
  pages        = {4990--4999},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{A message passing algorithm for the minimum cost multicut problem}},
  doi          = {10.1109/CVPR.2017.530},
  volume       = {2017},
  year         = {2017},
}

