@article{70,
  abstract     = {We consider the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process in a critical scaling parametrized by a≥0, which creates a shock in the particle density of order aT−1/3, T the observation time. When starting from step initial data, we provide bounds on the limiting law which in particular imply that in the double limit lima→∞limT→∞ one recovers the product limit law and the degeneration of the correlation length observed at shocks of order 1. This result is shown to apply to a general last-passage percolation model. We also obtain bounds on the two-point functions of several airy processes.},
  author       = {Nejjar, Peter},
  issn         = {1980-0436},
  journal      = {Latin American Journal of Probability and Mathematical Statistics},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {1311--1334},
  publisher    = {Instituto Nacional de Matematica Pura e Aplicada},
  title        = {{Transition to shocks in TASEP and decoupling of last passage times}},
  doi          = {10.30757/ALEA.v15-49},
  volume       = {15},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{703,
  abstract     = {We consider the NP-hard problem of MAP-inference for undirected discrete graphical models. We propose a polynomial time and practically efficient algorithm for finding a part of its optimal solution. Specifically, our algorithm marks some labels of the considered graphical model either as (i) optimal, meaning that they belong to all optimal solutions of the inference problem; (ii) non-optimal if they provably do not belong to any solution. With access to an exact solver of a linear programming relaxation to the MAP-inference problem, our algorithm marks the maximal possible (in a specified sense) number of labels. We also present a version of the algorithm, which has access to a suboptimal dual solver only and still can ensure the (non-)optimality for the marked labels, although the overall number of the marked labels may decrease. We propose an efficient implementation, which runs in time comparable to a single run of a suboptimal dual solver. Our method is well-scalable and shows state-of-the-art results on computational benchmarks from machine learning and computer vision.},
  author       = {Shekhovtsov, Alexander and Swoboda, Paul and Savchynskyy, Bogdan},
  issn         = {01628828},
  journal      = {IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence},
  number       = {7},
  pages        = {1668--1682},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{Maximum persistency via iterative relaxed inference with graphical models}},
  doi          = {10.1109/TPAMI.2017.2730884},
  volume       = {40},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7058,
  abstract     = {We examine recent magnetic torque measurements in two compounds, γ−Li2IrO3 and RuCl3, which have been discussed as possible realizations of the Kitaev model. The analysis of the reported discontinuity in torque, as an external magnetic field is rotated across the c axis in both crystals, suggests that they have a translationally invariant chiral spin order of the form ⟨Si⋅(Sj×Sk)⟩≠0 in the ground state and persisting over a very wide range of magnetic field and temperature. An extraordinary |B|B2 dependence of the torque for small fields, beside the usual B2 part, is predicted by the chiral spin order. Data for small fields are available for γ−Li2IrO3 and are found to be consistent with the prediction upon further analysis. Other experiments such as inelastic scattering and thermal Hall effect and several questions raised by the discovery of chiral spin order, including its topological consequences, are discussed.},
  author       = {Modic, Kimberly A and Ramshaw, B. J. and Shekhter, A. and Varma, C. M.},
  issn         = {2469-9969},
  journal      = {Physical Review B},
  number       = {20},
  publisher    = {APS},
  title        = {{Chiral spin order in some purported Kitaev spin-liquid compounds}},
  doi          = {10.1103/physrevb.98.205110},
  volume       = {98},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7059,
  abstract     = {Unusual behavior in quantum materials commonly arises from their effective low-dimensional physics, reflecting the underlying anisotropy in the spin and charge degrees of freedom. Here we introduce the magnetotropic coefficient k = ∂2F/∂θ2, the second derivative of the free energy F with respect to the magnetic field orientation θ in the crystal. We show that the magnetotropic coefficient can be quantitatively determined from a shift in the resonant frequency of a commercially available atomic force microscopy cantilever under magnetic field. This detection method enables part per 100 million sensitivity and the ability to measure magnetic anisotropy in nanogram-scale samples, as demonstrated on the Weyl semimetal NbP. Measurement of the magnetotropic coefficient in the spin-liquid candidate RuCl3 highlights its sensitivity to anisotropic phase transitions and allows a quantitative comparison to other thermodynamic coefficients via the Ehrenfest relations.},
  author       = {Modic, Kimberly A and Bachmann, Maja D. and Ramshaw, B. J. and Arnold, F. and Shirer, K. R. and Estry, Amelia and Betts, J. B. and Ghimire, Nirmal J. and Bauer, E. D. and Schmidt, Marcus and Baenitz, Michael and Svanidze, E. and McDonald, Ross D. and Shekhter, Arkady and Moll, Philip J. W.},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {3975},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Resonant torsion magnetometry in anisotropic quantum materials}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-018-06412-w},
  volume       = {9},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7062,
  abstract     = {Weyl fermions are a recently discovered ingredient for correlated states of electronic matter. A key difficulty has been that real materials also contain non-Weyl quasiparticles, and disentangling the experimental signatures has proven challenging. Here we use magnetic fields up to 95 T to drive the Weyl semimetal TaAs far into its quantum limit, where only the purely chiral 0th Landau levels of the Weyl fermions are occupied. We find the electrical resistivity to be nearly independent of magnetic field up to 50 T: unusual for conventional metals but consistent with the chiral anomaly for Weyl fermions. Above 50 T we observe a two-order-of-magnitude increase in resistivity, indicating that a gap opens in the chiral Landau levels. Above 80 T we observe strong ultrasonic attenuation below 2 K, suggesting a mesoscopically textured state of matter. These results point the way to inducing new correlated states of matter in the quantum limit of Weyl semimetals.},
  author       = {Ramshaw, B. J. and Modic, Kimberly A and Shekhter, Arkady and Zhang, Yi and Kim, Eun-Ah and Moll, Philip J. W. and Bachmann, Maja D. and Chan, M. K. and Betts, J. B. and Balakirev, F. and Migliori, A. and Ghimire, N. J. and Bauer, E. D. and Ronning, F. and McDonald, R. D.},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Quantum limit transport and destruction of the Weyl nodes in TaAs}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-018-04542-9},
  volume       = {9},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7063,
  abstract     = {The high-pressure synthesis and incommensurately modulated structure are reported for the new compound Sr2Pt8−xAs, with x = 0.715 (5). The structure consists of Sr2Pt3As layers alternating with Pt-only corrugated grids. Ab initio calculations predict a metallic character with a dominant role of the Pt d electrons. The electrical resistivity (ρ) and Seebeck coefficient confirm the metallic character, but surprisingly, ρ showed a near-flat temperature dependence. This observation fits the description of the Mooij correlation for electrical resistivity in disordered metals, originally developed for statistically distributed point defects. The discussed material has a long-range crystallographic order, but the high concentration of Pt vacancies, incommensurately ordered, strongly influences the electronic conduction properties. This result extends the range of validity of the Mooij correlation to long-range ordered incommensurately modulated vacancies. Motivated by the layered structure, the resistivity anisotropy was measured in a focused-ion-beam micro-fabricated well oriented single crystal. A low resistivity anisotropy indicates that the layers are electrically coupled and conduction channels along different directions are intermixed.},
  author       = {Martino, Edoardo and Arakcheeva, Alla and Autès, Gabriel and Pisoni, Andrea and Bachmann, Maja D. and Modic, Kimberly A and Helm, Toni and Yazyev, Oleg V. and Moll, Philip J. W. and Forró, László and Katrych, Sergiy},
  issn         = {2052-2525},
  journal      = {IUCrJ},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {470--477},
  publisher    = {International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)},
  title        = {{Sr2Pt8−xAs: A layered incommensurately modulated metal with saturated resistivity}},
  doi          = {10.1107/s2052252518007303},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2018},
}

@inproceedings{7116,
  abstract     = {Training deep learning models has received tremendous research interest recently. In particular, there has been intensive research on reducing the communication cost of training when using multiple computational devices, through reducing the precision of the underlying data representation. Naturally, such methods induce system trade-offs—lowering communication precision could de-crease communication overheads and improve scalability; but, on the other hand, it can also reduce the accuracy of training. In this paper, we study this trade-off space, and ask:Can low-precision communication consistently improve the end-to-end performance of training modern neural networks, with no accuracy loss?From the performance point of view, the answer to this question may appear deceptively easy: compressing communication through low precision should help when the ratio between communication and computation is high. However, this answer is less straightforward when we try to generalize this principle across various neural network architectures (e.g., AlexNet vs. ResNet),number of GPUs (e.g., 2 vs. 8 GPUs), machine configurations(e.g., EC2 instances vs. NVIDIA DGX-1), communication primitives (e.g., MPI vs. NCCL), and even different GPU architectures(e.g., Kepler vs. Pascal). Currently, it is not clear how a realistic realization of all these factors maps to the speed up provided by low-precision communication. In this paper, we conduct an empirical study to answer this question and report the insights.},
  author       = {Grubic, Demjan and Tam, Leo and Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Zhang, Ce},
  booktitle    = {Proceedings of the 21st International Conference on Extending Database Technology},
  isbn         = {9783893180783},
  issn         = {2367-2005},
  location     = {Vienna, Austria},
  pages        = {145--156},
  publisher    = {OpenProceedings},
  title        = {{Synchronous multi-GPU training for deep learning with low-precision communications: An empirical study}},
  doi          = {10.5441/002/EDBT.2018.14},
  year         = {2018},
}

@inproceedings{7123,
  abstract     = {Population protocols are a popular model of distributed computing, in which n agents with limited local state interact randomly, and cooperate to collectively compute global predicates. Inspired by recent developments in DNA programming, an extensive series of papers, across different communities, has examined the computability and complexity characteristics of this model. Majority, or consensus, is a central task in this model, in which agents need to collectively reach a decision as to which one of two states A or B had a higher initial count. Two metrics are important: the time that a protocol requires to stabilize to an output decision, and the state space size that each agent requires to do so. It is known that majority requires Ω(log log n) states per agent to allow for fast (poly-logarithmic time) stabilization, and that O(log2 n) states are sufficient. Thus, there is an exponential gap between the space upper and lower bounds for this problem. This paper addresses this question.

On the negative side, we provide a new lower bound of Ω(log n) states for any protocol which stabilizes in O(n1–c) expected time, for any constant c > 0. This result is conditional on monotonicity and output assumptions, satisfied by all known protocols. Technically, it represents a departure from previous lower bounds, in that it does not rely on the existence of dense configurations. Instead, we introduce a new generalized surgery technique to prove the existence of incorrect executions for any algorithm which would contradict the lower bound. Subsequently, our lower bound also applies to general initial configurations, including ones with a leader. On the positive side, we give a new algorithm for majority which uses O(log n) states, and stabilizes in O(log2 n) expected time. Central to the algorithm is a new leaderless phase clock technique, which allows agents to synchronize in phases of Θ(n log n) consecutive interactions using O(log n) states per agent, exploiting a new connection between population protocols and power-of-two-choices load balancing mechanisms. We also employ our phase clock to build a leader election algorithm with a state space of size O(log n), which stabilizes in O(log2 n) expected time.},
  author       = {Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Aspnes, James and Gelashvili, Rati},
  booktitle    = {Proceedings of the 29th Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms},
  isbn         = {9781611975031},
  location     = {New Orleans, LA, United States},
  pages        = {2221--2239},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{Space-optimal majority in population protocols}},
  doi          = {10.1137/1.9781611975031.144},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7126,
  abstract     = {In the Minimum Description Length (MDL) principle, learning from the data is equivalent to an optimal coding problem. We show that the codes that achieve optimal compression in MDL are critical in a very precise sense. First, when they are taken as generative models of samples, they generate samples with broad empirical distributions and with a high value of the relevance, defined as the entropy of the empirical frequencies. These results are derived for different statistical models (Dirichlet model, independent and pairwise dependent spin models, and restricted Boltzmann machines). Second, MDL codes sit precisely at a second order phase transition point where the symmetry between the sampled outcomes is spontaneously broken. The order parameter controlling the phase transition is the coding cost of the samples. The phase transition is a manifestation of the optimality of MDL codes, and it arises because codes that achieve a higher compression do not exist. These results suggest a clear interpretation of the widespread occurrence of statistical criticality as a characterization of samples which are maximally informative on the underlying generative process.},
  author       = {Cubero, Ryan J and Marsili, Matteo and Roudi, Yasser},
  issn         = {1099-4300},
  journal      = {Entropy},
  keywords     = {Minimum Description Length, normalized maximum likelihood, statistical criticality, phase transitions, large deviations},
  number       = {10},
  publisher    = {MDPI},
  title        = {{Minimum description length codes are critical}},
  doi          = {10.3390/e20100755},
  volume       = {20},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{723,
  abstract     = {Escaping local optima is one of the major obstacles to function optimisation. Using the metaphor of a fitness landscape, local optima correspond to hills separated by fitness valleys that have to be overcome. We define a class of fitness valleys of tunable difficulty by considering their length, representing the Hamming path between the two optima and their depth, the drop in fitness. For this function class we present a runtime comparison between stochastic search algorithms using different search strategies. The (1+1) EA is a simple and well-studied evolutionary algorithm that has to jump across the valley to a point of higher fitness because it does not accept worsening moves (elitism). In contrast, the Metropolis algorithm and the Strong Selection Weak Mutation (SSWM) algorithm, a famous process in population genetics, are both able to cross the fitness valley by accepting worsening moves. We show that the runtime of the (1+1) EA depends critically on the length of the valley while the runtimes of the non-elitist algorithms depend crucially on the depth of the valley. Moreover, we show that both SSWM and Metropolis can also efficiently optimise a rugged function consisting of consecutive valleys.},
  author       = {Oliveto, Pietro and Paixao, Tiago and Pérez Heredia, Jorge and Sudholt, Dirk and Trubenova, Barbora},
  journal      = {Algorithmica},
  number       = {5},
  pages        = {1604 -- 1633},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{How to escape local optima in black box optimisation when non elitism outperforms elitism}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00453-017-0369-2},
  volume       = {80},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7277,
  abstract     = {Solid alkali metal carbonates are universal passivation layer components of intercalation battery materials and common side products in metal‐O2 batteries, and are believed to form and decompose reversibly in metal‐O2/CO2 cells. In these cathodes, Li2CO3 decomposes to CO2 when exposed to potentials above 3.8 V vs. Li/Li+. However, O2 evolution, as would be expected according to the decomposition reaction 2 Li2CO3→4 Li++4 e−+2 CO2+O2, is not detected. O atoms are thus unaccounted for, which was previously ascribed to unidentified parasitic reactions. Here, we show that highly reactive singlet oxygen (1O2) forms upon oxidizing Li2CO3 in an aprotic electrolyte and therefore does not evolve as O2. These results have substantial implications for the long‐term cyclability of batteries: they underpin the importance of avoiding 1O2 in metal‐O2 batteries, question the possibility of a reversible metal‐O2/CO2 battery based on a carbonate discharge product, and help explain the interfacial reactivity of transition‐metal cathodes with residual Li2CO3.},
  author       = {Mahne, Nika and Renfrew, Sara E. and McCloskey, Bryan D. and Freunberger, Stefan Alexander},
  issn         = {1433-7851},
  journal      = {Angewandte Chemie International Edition},
  number       = {19},
  pages        = {5529--5533},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Electrochemical oxidation of Lithium Carbonate generates singlet oxygen}},
  doi          = {10.1002/anie.201802277},
  volume       = {57},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7285,
  abstract     = {Hydrogelation, the self-assembly of molecules into soft, water-loaded networks, is one way to bridge the structural gap between single molecules and functional materials. The potential of hydrogels, such as those based on perylene bisimides, lies in their chemical, physical, optical, and electronic properties, which are governed by the supramolecular structure of the gel. However, the structural motifs and their precise role for long-range conductivity are yet to be explored. Here, we present a comprehensive structural picture of a perylene bisimide hydrogel, suggesting that its long-range conductivity is limited by charge transfer between electronic backbones. We reveal nanocrystalline ribbon-like structures as the electronic and structural backbone units between which charge transfer is mediated by polar solvent bridges. We exemplify this effect with sensing, where exposure to polar vapor enhances conductivity by 5 orders of magnitude, emphasizing the crucial role of the interplay between structural motif and surrounding medium for the rational design of devices based on nanocrystalline hydrogels.},
  author       = {Burian, Max and Rigodanza, Francesco and Demitri, Nicola and D̵ord̵ević, Luka and Marchesan, Silvia and Steinhartova, Tereza and Letofsky-Papst, Ilse and Khalakhan, Ivan and Mourad, Eléonore and Freunberger, Stefan Alexander and Amenitsch, Heinz and Prato, Maurizio and Syrgiannis, Zois},
  issn         = {1936-0851},
  journal      = {ACS Nano},
  number       = {6},
  pages        = {5800--5806},
  publisher    = {ACS},
  title        = {{Inter-backbone charge transfer as prerequisite for long-range conductivity in perylene bisimide hydrogels}},
  doi          = {10.1021/acsnano.8b01689},
  volume       = {12},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7287,
  abstract     = {Passivation layers on electrode materials are ubiquitous in nonaqueous battery chemistries and strongly govern performance and lifetime. They comprise breakdown products of the electrolyte including carbonate, alkyl carbonates, alkoxides, carboxylates, and polymers. Parasitic chemistry in metal–O2 batteries forms similar products and is tied to the deviation of the O2 balance from the ideal stoichiometry during formation/decomposition of alkaline peroxides or superoxides. Accurate and integral quantification of carbonaceous species and peroxides or superoxides in battery electrodes remains, however, elusive. We present a refined procedure to quantify them accurately and sensitively by pointing out and rectifying pitfalls of previous procedures. Carbonaceous compounds are differentiated into inorganic and organic ones. We combine mass and UV–vis spectrometry to quantify evolved O2 and complexed peroxide and CO2 evolved from carbonaceous compounds by acid treatment and Fenton’s reaction. The capabilities of the method are exemplified by means of Li–O2 and Na–O2 cathodes, graphite anodes, and LiNi0.8Co0.15Al0.05O2 cathodes.},
  author       = {Schafzahl, Bettina and Mourad, Eléonore and Schafzahl, Lukas and Petit, Yann K. and Raju, Anjana R. and Thotiyl, Musthafa Ottakam and Wilkening, Martin and Slugovc, Christian and Freunberger, Stefan Alexander},
  issn         = {2380-8195},
  journal      = {ACS Energy Letters},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {170--176},
  publisher    = {ACS},
  title        = {{Quantifying total superoxide, peroxide, and carbonaceous compounds in metal–O2 batteries and the solid electrolyte interphase}},
  doi          = {10.1021/acsenergylett.7b01111},
  volume       = {3},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{738,
  abstract     = {This paper is devoted to automatic competitive analysis of real-time scheduling algorithms for firm-deadline tasksets, where only completed tasks con- tribute some utility to the system. Given such a taskset T , the competitive ratio of an on-line scheduling algorithm A for T is the worst-case utility ratio of A over the utility achieved by a clairvoyant algorithm. We leverage the theory of quantitative graph games to address the competitive analysis and competitive synthesis problems. For the competitive analysis case, given any taskset T and any finite-memory on- line scheduling algorithm A , we show that the competitive ratio of A in T can be computed in polynomial time in the size of the state space of A . Our approach is flexible as it also provides ways to model meaningful constraints on the released task sequences that determine the competitive ratio. We provide an experimental study of many well-known on-line scheduling algorithms, which demonstrates the feasibility of our competitive analysis approach that effectively replaces human ingenuity (required Preliminary versions of this paper have appeared in Chatterjee et al. ( 2013 , 2014 ). B Andreas Pavlogiannis pavlogiannis@ist.ac.at Krishnendu Chatterjee krish.chat@ist.ac.at Alexander Kößler koe@ecs.tuwien.ac.at Ulrich Schmid s@ecs.tuwien.ac.at 1 IST Austria (Institute of Science and Technology Austria), Am Campus 1, 3400 Klosterneuburg, Austria 2 Embedded Computing Systems Group, Vienna University of Technology, Treitlstrasse 3, 1040 Vienna, Austria 123 Real-Time Syst for finding worst-case scenarios) by computing power. For the competitive synthesis case, we are just given a taskset T , and the goal is to automatically synthesize an opti- mal on-line scheduling algorithm A , i.e., one that guarantees the largest competitive ratio possible for T . We show how the competitive synthesis problem can be reduced to a two-player graph game with partial information, and establish that the compu- tational complexity of solving this game is Np -complete. The competitive synthesis problem is hence in Np in the size of the state space of the non-deterministic labeled transition system encoding the taskset. Overall, the proposed framework assists in the selection of suitable scheduling algorithms for a given taskset, which is in fact the most common situation in real-time systems design. },
  author       = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Pavlogiannis, Andreas and Kößler, Alexander and Schmid, Ulrich},
  journal      = {Real-Time Systems},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {166 -- 207},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Automated competitive analysis of real time scheduling with graph games}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s11241-017-9293-4},
  volume       = {54},
  year         = {2018},
}

@inproceedings{7407,
  abstract     = {Proofs of space (PoS) [Dziembowski et al., CRYPTO'15] are proof systems where a prover can convince a verifier that he "wastes" disk space. PoS were introduced as a more ecological and economical replacement for proofs of work which are currently used to secure blockchains like Bitcoin. In this work we investigate extensions of PoS which allow the prover to embed useful data into the dedicated space, which later can be recovered. Our first contribution is a security proof for the original PoS from CRYPTO'15 in the random oracle model (the original proof only applied to a restricted class of adversaries which can store a subset of the data an honest prover would store). When this PoS is instantiated with recent constructions of maximally depth robust graphs, our proof implies basically optimal security. As a second contribution we show three different extensions of this PoS where useful data can be embedded into the space required by the prover. Our security proof for the PoS extends (non-trivially) to these constructions. We discuss how some of these variants can be used as proofs of catalytic space (PoCS), a notion we put forward in this work, and which basically is a PoS where most of the space required by the prover can be used to backup useful data. Finally we discuss how one of the extensions is a candidate construction for a proof of replication (PoR), a proof system recently suggested in the Filecoin whitepaper. },
  author       = {Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z},
  booktitle    = {10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science  Conference (ITCS 2019)},
  isbn         = {978-3-95977-095-8},
  issn         = {1868-8969},
  location     = {San Diego, CA, United States},
  pages        = {59:1--59:25},
  publisher    = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik},
  title        = {{Proofs of catalytic space}},
  doi          = {10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.59},
  volume       = {124},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{742,
  abstract     = {We give a detailed and easily accessible proof of Gromov’s Topological Overlap Theorem. Let X be a finite simplicial complex or, more generally, a finite polyhedral cell complex of dimension d. Informally, the theorem states that if X has sufficiently strong higher-dimensional expansion properties (which generalize edge expansion of graphs and are defined in terms of cellular cochains of X) then X has the following topological overlap property: for every continuous map (Formula presented.) there exists a point (Formula presented.) that is contained in the images of a positive fraction (Formula presented.) of the d-cells of X. More generally, the conclusion holds if (Formula presented.) is replaced by any d-dimensional piecewise-linear manifold M, with a constant (Formula presented.) that depends only on d and on the expansion properties of X, but not on M.},
  author       = {Dotterrer, Dominic and Kaufman, Tali and Wagner, Uli},
  journal      = {Geometriae Dedicata},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {307–317},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{On expansion and topological overlap}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s10711-017-0291-4},
  volume       = {195},
  year         = {2018},
}

@unpublished{75,
  abstract     = {We prove that any convex body in the plane can be partitioned into m convex parts of equal areas and perimeters for any integer m≥2; this result was previously known for prime powers m=pk. We also give a higher-dimensional generalization.},
  author       = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Avvakumov, Sergey and Karasev, Roman},
  publisher    = {arXiv},
  title        = {{Convex fair partitions into arbitrary number of pieces}},
  doi          = {10.48550/arXiv.1804.03057},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{76,
  abstract     = {Consider a fully-connected synchronous distributed system consisting of n nodes, where up to f nodes may be faulty and every node starts in an arbitrary initial state. In the synchronous C-counting problem, all nodes need to eventually agree on a counter that is increased by one modulo C in each round for given C&gt;1. In the self-stabilising firing squad problem, the task is to eventually guarantee that all non-faulty nodes have simultaneous responses to external inputs: if a subset of the correct nodes receive an external “go” signal as input, then all correct nodes should agree on a round (in the not-too-distant future) in which to jointly output a “fire” signal. Moreover, no node should generate a “fire” signal without some correct node having previously received a “go” signal as input. We present a framework reducing both tasks to binary consensus at very small cost. For example, we obtain a deterministic algorithm for self-stabilising Byzantine firing squads with optimal resilience f&lt;n/3, asymptotically optimal stabilisation and response time O(f), and message size O(log f). As our framework does not restrict the type of consensus routines used, we also obtain efficient randomised solutions.},
  author       = {Lenzen, Christoph and Rybicki, Joel},
  journal      = {Distributed Computing},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Near-optimal self-stabilising counting and firing squads}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00446-018-0342-6},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{77,
  abstract     = {Holes confined in quantum dots have gained considerable interest in the past few years due to their potential as spin qubits. Here we demonstrate two-axis control of a spin 3/2 qubit in natural Ge. The qubit is formed in a hut wire double quantum dot device. The Pauli spin blockade principle allowed us to demonstrate electric dipole spin resonance by applying a radio frequency electric field to one of the electrodes defining the double quantum dot. Coherent hole spin oscillations with Rabi frequencies reaching 140 MHz are demonstrated and dephasing times of 130 ns are measured. The reported results emphasize the potential of Ge as a platform for fast and electrically tunable hole spin qubit devices.},
  author       = {Watzinger, Hannes and Kukucka, Josip and Vukusic, Lada and Gao, Fei and Wang, Ting and Schäffler, Friedrich and Zhang, Jian and Katsaros, Georgios},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  number       = {3902 },
  publisher    = {Nature Publishing Group},
  title        = {{A germanium hole spin qubit}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-018-06418-4},
  volume       = {9},
  year         = {2018},
}

@article{7712,
  abstract     = {Male pattern baldness (MPB) is a sex-limited, age-related, complex trait. We study MPB genetics in 205,327 European males from the UK Biobank. Here we show that MPB is strongly heritable and polygenic, with pedigree-heritability of 0.62 (SE = 0.03) estimated from close relatives, and SNP-heritability of 0.39 (SE = 0.01) from conventionally-unrelated males. We detect 624 near-independent genome-wide loci, contributing SNP-heritability of 0.25 (SE = 0.01), of which 26 X-chromosome loci explain 11.6%. Autosomal genetic variance is enriched for common variants and regions of lower linkage disequilibrium. We identify plausible genetic correlations between MPB and multiple sex-limited markers of earlier puberty, increased bone mineral density (rg = 0.15) and pancreatic β-cell function (rg = 0.12). Correlations with reproductive traits imply an effect on fitness, consistent with an estimated linear selection gradient of -0.018 per MPB standard deviation. Overall, we provide genetic insights into MPB: a phenotype of interest in its own right, with value as a model sex-limited, complex trait.},
  author       = {Yap, Chloe X. and Sidorenko, Julia and Wu, Yang and Kemper, Kathryn E. and Yang, Jian and Wray, Naomi R. and Robinson, Matthew Richard and Visscher, Peter M.},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Dissection of genetic variation and evidence for pleiotropy in male pattern baldness}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-018-07862-y},
  volume       = {9},
  year         = {2018},
}

