@article{896,
  abstract     = {Multicellular eukaryotes have evolved a range of mechanisms for immune recognition. A widespread family involved in innate immunity are the NACHT-domain and leucine-rich-repeat-containing (NLR) proteins.Mammals have small numbers of NLR proteins, whereas in some species, mostly those without adaptive immune systems, NLRs have expanded into very large families.We describe a family of nearly 400NLR proteins encoded in the zebrafish genome. The proteins share a defining overall structure, which arose in fishes after a fusion of the core NLR domains with a B30.2 domain, but can be subdivided into four groups based on their NACHT domains. Gene conversion acting differentially on the NACHT and B30.2 domains has shaped the family and created the groups. Evidence of positive selection in the B30.2 domain indicates that this domain rather than the leucine-rich repeats acts as the pathogen recognition module. In an unusual chromosomal organization, the majority of the genes are located on one chromosome arm, interspersed with other large multigene families, including a new family encoding zinc-finger proteins. The NLR-B30.2 proteins represent a new family with diversity in the specific recognition module that is present in fishes in spite of the parallel existence of an adaptive immune system.},
  author       = {Howe, Kerstin L and Schiffer, Philipp H and Zielinski, Julia G and Wiehe, Thomas H and Laird, Gavin K and Marioni, John C and Soylemez, Onuralp and Fyodor Kondrashov and Leptin, Maria},
  journal      = {Open Biology},
  number       = {4},
  publisher    = {Royal Society, The},
  title        = {{Structure and evolutionary history of a large family of NLR proteins in the zebrafish}},
  doi          = {10.1098/rsob.160009},
  volume       = {6},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1616,
  abstract     = {The hippocampus plays a key role in learning and memory. Previous studies suggested that the main types of principal neurons, dentate gyrus granule cells (GCs), CA3 pyramidal neurons, and CA1 pyramidal neurons, differ in their activity pattern, with sparse firing in GCs and more frequent firing in CA3 and CA1 pyramidal neurons. It has been assumed but never shown that such different activity may be caused by differential synaptic excitation. To test this hypothesis, we performed high-resolution whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in anesthetized rats in vivo. In contrast to previous in vitro data, both CA3 and CA1 pyramidal neurons fired action potentials spontaneously, with a frequency of ∼3–6 Hz, whereas GCs were silent. Furthermore, both CA3 and CA1 cells primarily fired in bursts. To determine the underlying mechanisms, we quantitatively assessed the frequency of spontaneous excitatory synaptic input, the passive membrane properties, and the active membrane characteristics. Surprisingly, GCs showed comparable synaptic excitation to CA3 and CA1 cells and the highest ratio of excitation versus hyperpolarizing inhibition. Thus, differential synaptic excitation is not responsible for differences in firing. Moreover, the three types of hippocampal neurons markedly differed in their passive properties. While GCs showed the most negative membrane potential, CA3 pyramidal neurons had the highest input resistance and the slowest membrane time constant. The three types of neurons also differed in the active membrane characteristics. GCs showed the highest action potential threshold, but displayed the largest gain of the input-output curves. In conclusion, our results reveal that differential firing of the three main types of hippocampal principal neurons in vivo is not primarily caused by differences in the characteristics of the synaptic input, but by the distinct properties of synaptic integration and input-output transformation.},
  author       = {Kowalski, Janina and Gan, Jian and Jonas, Peter M and Pernia-Andrade, Alejandro},
  issn         = {1098-1063},
  journal      = {Hippocampus},
  number       = {5},
  pages        = {668 -- 682},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Intrinsic membrane properties determine hippocampal differential firing pattern in vivo in anesthetized rats}},
  doi          = {10.1002/hipo.22550},
  volume       = {26},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1617,
  abstract     = {We study the discrepancy of jittered sampling sets: such a set P⊂ [0,1]d is generated for fixed m∈ℕ by partitioning [0,1]d into md axis aligned cubes of equal measure and placing a random point inside each of the N=md cubes. We prove that, for N sufficiently large, 1/10 d/N1/2+1/2d ≤EDN∗(P)≤ √d(log N) 1/2/N1/2+1/2d, where the upper bound with an unspecified constant Cd was proven earlier by Beck. Our proof makes crucial use of the sharp Dvoretzky-Kiefer-Wolfowitz inequality and a suitably taylored Bernstein inequality; we have reasons to believe that the upper bound has the sharp scaling in N. Additional heuristics suggest that jittered sampling should be able to improve known bounds on the inverse of the star-discrepancy in the regime N≳dd. We also prove a partition principle showing that every partition of [0,1]d combined with a jittered sampling construction gives rise to a set whose expected squared L2-discrepancy is smaller than that of purely random points.},
  author       = {Pausinger, Florian and Steinerberger, Stefan},
  journal      = {Journal of Complexity},
  pages        = {199 -- 216},
  publisher    = {Academic Press},
  title        = {{On the discrepancy of jittered sampling}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.jco.2015.11.003},
  volume       = {33},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1620,
  abstract     = {We consider the Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer free energy functional for particles interacting via a two-body potential on a microscopic scale and in the presence of weak external fields varying on a macroscopic scale. We study the influence of the external fields on the critical temperature. We show that in the limit where the ratio between the microscopic and macroscopic scale tends to zero, the next to leading order of the critical temperature is determined by the lowest eigenvalue of the linearization of the Ginzburg–Landau equation.},
  author       = {Frank, Rupert and Hainzl, Christian and Seiringer, Robert and Solovej, Jan},
  journal      = {Communications in Mathematical Physics},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {189 -- 216},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{The external field dependence of the BCS critical temperature}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00220-015-2526-2},
  volume       = {342},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1622,
  abstract     = {We prove analogues of the Lieb–Thirring and Hardy–Lieb–Thirring inequalities for many-body quantum systems with fractional kinetic operators and homogeneous interaction potentials, where no anti-symmetry on the wave functions is assumed. These many-body inequalities imply interesting one-body interpolation inequalities, and we show that the corresponding one- and many-body inequalities are actually equivalent in certain cases.},
  author       = {Lundholm, Douglas and Nam, Phan and Portmann, Fabian},
  journal      = {Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis},
  number       = {3},
  pages        = {1343 -- 1382},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Fractional Hardy–Lieb–Thirring and related Inequalities for interacting systems}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00205-015-0923-5},
  volume       = {219},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1631,
  abstract     = {Ancestral processes are fundamental to modern population genetics and spatial structure has been the subject of intense interest for many years. Despite this interest, almost nothing is known about the distribution of the locations of pedigree or genetic ancestors. Using both spatially continuous and stepping-stone models, we show that the distribution of pedigree ancestors approaches a travelling wave, for which we develop two alternative approximations. The speed and width of the wave are sensitive to the local details of the model. After a short time, genetic ancestors spread far more slowly than pedigree ancestors, ultimately diffusing out with radius ## rather than spreading at constant speed. In contrast to the wave of pedigree ancestors, the spread of genetic ancestry is insensitive to the local details of the models.},
  author       = {Kelleher, Jerome and Etheridge, Alison and Véber, Amandine and Barton, Nicholas H},
  journal      = {Theoretical Population Biology},
  pages        = {1 -- 12},
  publisher    = {Academic Press},
  title        = {{Spread of pedigree versus genetic ancestry in spatially distributed populations}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.tpb.2015.10.008},
  volume       = {108},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1641,
  abstract     = {The plant hormone auxin (indole-3-acetic acid) is a major regulator of plant growth and development including embryo and root patterning, lateral organ formation and growth responses to environmental stimuli. Auxin is directionally transported from cell to cell by the action of specific auxin influx [AUXIN-RESISTANT1 (AUX1)] and efflux [PIN-FORMED (PIN)] transport regulators, whose polar, subcellular localizations are aligned with the direction of the auxin flow. Auxin itself regulates its own transport by modulation of the expression and subcellular localization of the auxin transporters. Increased auxin levels promote the transcription of PIN2 and AUX1 genes as well as stabilize PIN proteins at the plasma membrane, whereas prolonged auxin exposure increases the turnover of PIN proteins and their degradation in the vacuole. In this study, we applied a forward genetic approach, to identify molecular components playing a role in the auxin-mediated degradation. We generated EMS-mutagenized Arabidopsis PIN2::PIN2:GFP, AUX1::AUX1:YFP eir1aux1 populations and designed a screen for mutants with persistently strong fluorescent signals of the tagged PIN2 and AUX1 after prolonged treatment with the synthetic auxin 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D). This approach yielded novel auxin degradation mutants defective in trafficking and degradation of PIN2 and AUX1 proteins and established a role for auxin-mediated degradation in plant development.},
  author       = {Zemová, Radka and Zwiewka, Marta and Bielach, Agnieszka and Robert, Hélène and Friml, Jirí},
  journal      = {Journal of Plant Growth Regulation},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {465 -- 476},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{A forward genetic screen for new regulators of auxin mediated degradation of auxin transport proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00344-015-9553-2},
  volume       = {35},
  year         = {2016},
}

@inproceedings{1653,
  abstract     = {A somewhere statistically binding (SSB) hash, introduced by Hubáček and Wichs (ITCS ’15), can be used to hash a long string x to a short digest y = H hk (x) using a public hashing-key hk. Furthermore, there is a way to set up the hash key hk to make it statistically binding on some arbitrary hidden position i, meaning that: (1) the digest y completely determines the i’th bit (or symbol) of x so that all pre-images of y have the same value in the i’th position, (2) it is computationally infeasible to distinguish the position i on which hk is statistically binding from any other position i’. Lastly, the hash should have a local opening property analogous to Merkle-Tree hashing, meaning that given x and y = H hk (x) it should be possible to create a short proof π that certifies the value of the i’th bit (or symbol) of x without having to provide the entire input x. A similar primitive called a positional accumulator, introduced by Koppula, Lewko and Waters (STOC ’15) further supports dynamic updates of the hashed value. These tools, which are interesting in their own right, also serve as one of the main technical components in several recent works building advanced applications from indistinguishability obfuscation (iO).

The prior constructions of SSB hashing and positional accumulators required fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) and iO respectively. In this work, we give new constructions of these tools based on well studied number-theoretic assumptions such as DDH, Phi-Hiding and DCR, as well as a general construction from lossy/injective functions.},
  author       = {Okamoto, Tatsuaki and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z and Waters, Brent and Wichs, Daniel},
  location     = {Auckland, New Zealand},
  pages        = {121 -- 145},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{New realizations of somewhere statistically binding hashing and positional accumulators}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-662-48797-6_6},
  volume       = {9452},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1662,
  abstract     = {We introduce a modification of the classic notion of intrinsic volume using persistence moments of height functions. Evaluating the modified first intrinsic volume on digital approximations of a compact body with smoothly embedded boundary in Rn, we prove convergence to the first intrinsic volume of the body as the resolution of the approximation improves. We have weaker results for the other modified intrinsic volumes, proving they converge to the corresponding intrinsic volumes of the n-dimensional unit ball.},
  author       = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Pausinger, Florian},
  journal      = {Advances in Mathematics},
  pages        = {674 -- 703},
  publisher    = {Academic Press},
  title        = {{Approximation and convergence of the intrinsic volume}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.aim.2015.10.004},
  volume       = {287},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1705,
  abstract     = {Hybrid systems represent an important and powerful formalism for modeling real-world applications such as embedded systems. A verification tool like SpaceEx is based on the exploration of a symbolic search space (the region space). As a verification tool, it is typically optimized towards proving the absence of errors. In some settings, e.g., when the verification tool is employed in a feedback-directed design cycle, one would like to have the option to call a version that is optimized towards finding an error trajectory in the region space. A recent approach in this direction is based on guided search. Guided search relies on a cost function that indicates which states are promising to be explored, and preferably explores more promising states first. In this paper, we propose an abstraction-based cost function based on coarse-grained space abstractions for guiding the reachability analysis. For this purpose, a suitable abstraction technique that exploits the flexible granularity of modern reachability analysis algorithms is introduced. The new cost function is an effective extension of pattern database approaches that have been successfully applied in other areas. The approach has been implemented in the SpaceEx model checker. The evaluation shows its practical potential.},
  author       = {Bogomolov, Sergiy and Donzé, Alexandre and Frehse, Goran and Grosu, Radu and Johnson, Taylor and Ladan, Hamed and Podelski, Andreas and Wehrle, Martin},
  journal      = {International Journal on Software Tools for Technology Transfer},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {449 -- 467},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Guided search for hybrid systems based on coarse-grained space abstractions}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s10009-015-0393-y},
  volume       = {18},
  year         = {2016},
}

@inproceedings{1707,
  abstract     = {Volunteer supporters play an important role in modern crisis and disaster management. In the times of mobile Internet devices, help from thousands of volunteers can be requested within a short time span, thus relieving professional helpers from minor chores or geographically spread-out tasks. However, the simultaneous availability of many volunteers also poses new problems. In particular, the volunteer efforts must be well coordinated, or otherwise situations might emerge in which too many idle volunteers at one location become more of a burden than a relief to the professionals.
In this work, we study the task of optimally assigning volunteers to selected locations, e.g. in order to perform regular measurements, to report on damage, or to distribute information or resources to the population in a crisis situation. We formulate the assignment tasks as an optimization problem and propose an effective and efficient solution procedure. Experiments on real data of the Team Österreich, consisting of over 36,000 Austrian volunteers, show the effectiveness and efficiency of our approach.},
  author       = {Pielorz, Jasmin and Lampert, Christoph},
  location     = {Rennes, France},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{Optimal geospatial allocation of volunteers for crisis management}},
  doi          = {10.1109/ICT-DM.2015.7402041},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{173,
  abstract     = {We calculate admissible values of r such that a square-free polynomial with integer coefficients, no fixed prime divisor and irreducible factors of degree at most 3 takes infinitely many values that are a product of at most r distinct primes.},
  author       = {Browning, Timothy D and Booker, Andrew},
  journal      = {Discrete Analysis},
  pages        = {1 -- 18},
  title        = {{Square-free values of reducible polynomials}},
  doi          = {10.19086/da.732},
  volume       = {8},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1794,
  abstract     = {We consider Conditional random fields (CRFs) with pattern-based potentials defined on a chain. In this model the energy of a string (labeling) (Formula presented.) is the sum of terms over intervals [i, j] where each term is non-zero only if the substring (Formula presented.) equals a prespecified pattern w. Such CRFs can be naturally applied to many sequence tagging problems. We present efficient algorithms for the three standard inference tasks in a CRF, namely computing (i) the partition function, (ii) marginals, and (iii) computing the MAP. Their complexities are respectively (Formula presented.), (Formula presented.) and (Formula presented.) where L is the combined length of input patterns, (Formula presented.) is the maximum length of a pattern, and D is the input alphabet. This improves on the previous algorithms of Ye et al. (NIPS, 2009) whose complexities are respectively (Formula presented.), (Formula presented.) and (Formula presented.), where (Formula presented.) is the number of input patterns. In addition, we give an efficient algorithm for sampling, and revisit the case of MAP with non-positive weights.},
  author       = {Kolmogorov, Vladimir and Takhanov, Rustem},
  journal      = {Algorithmica},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {17 -- 46},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Inference algorithms for pattern-based CRFs on sequence data}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00453-015-0017-7},
  volume       = {76},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1833,
  abstract     = {Relational models for contingency tables are generalizations of log-linear models, allowing effects associated with arbitrary subsets of cells in the table, and not necessarily containing the overall effect, that is, a common parameter in every cell. Similarly to log-linear models, relational models can be extended to non-negative distributions, but the extension requires more complex methods. An extended relational model is defined as an algebraic variety, and it turns out to be the closure of the original model with respect to the Bregman divergence. In the extended relational model, the MLE of the cell parameters always exists and is unique, but some of its properties may be different from those of the MLE under log-linear models. The MLE can be computed using a generalized iterative scaling procedure based on Bregman projections. },
  author       = {Klimova, Anna and Rudas, Tamás},
  journal      = {Journal of Multivariate Analysis},
  pages        = {440 -- 452},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{On the closure of relational models}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.jmva.2015.10.005},
  volume       = {143},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{1881,
  abstract     = {We consider random matrices of the form H=W+λV, λ∈ℝ+, where W is a real symmetric or complex Hermitian Wigner matrix of size N and V is a real bounded diagonal random matrix of size N with i.i.d.\ entries that are independent of W. We assume subexponential decay for the matrix entries of W and we choose λ∼1, so that the eigenvalues of W and λV are typically of the same order. Further, we assume that the density of the entries of V is supported on a single interval and is convex near the edges of its support. In this paper we prove that there is λ+∈ℝ+ such that the largest eigenvalues of H are in the limit of large N determined by the order statistics of V for λ&gt;λ+. In particular, the largest eigenvalue of H has a Weibull distribution in the limit N→∞ if λ&gt;λ+. Moreover, for N sufficiently large, we show that the eigenvectors associated to the largest eigenvalues are partially localized for λ&gt;λ+, while they are completely delocalized for λ&lt;λ+. Similar results hold for the lowest eigenvalues. },
  author       = {Lee, Jioon and Schnelli, Kevin},
  journal      = {Probability Theory and Related Fields},
  number       = {1-2},
  pages        = {165 -- 241},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Extremal eigenvalues and eigenvectors of deformed Wigner matrices}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00440-014-0610-8},
  volume       = {164},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{6732,
  abstract     = {Consider the transmission of a polar code of block length N and rate R over a binary memoryless symmetric channel W and let P e be the block error probability under successive cancellation decoding. In this paper, we develop new bounds that characterize the relationship of the parameters R, N, P e , and the quality of the channel W quantified by its capacity I(W) and its Bhattacharyya parameter Z(W). In previous work, two main regimes were studied. In the error exponent regime, the channel W and the rate R <; I(W) are fixed, and it was proved that the error probability Pe scales roughly as 2 -√N . In the scaling exponent approach, the channel W and the error probability Pe are fixed and it was proved that the gap to capacity I(W) - R scales as N -1/μ . Here, μ is called scaling exponent and this scaling exponent depends on the channel W. A heuristic computation for the binary erasure channel (BEC) gives μ = 3.627 and it was shown that, for any channel W, 3.579 ≤ μ ≤ 5.702. Our contributions are as follows. First, we provide the tighter upper bound μ <;≤ 4.714 valid for any W. With the same technique, we obtain the upper bound μ ≤ 3.639 for the case of the BEC; this upper bound approaches very closely the heuristically derived value for the scaling exponent of the erasure channel. Second, we develop a trade-off between the gap to capacity I(W)- R and the error probability Pe as the functions of the block length N. In other words, we neither fix the gap to capacity (error exponent regime) nor the error probability (scaling exponent regime), but we do consider a moderate deviations regime in which we study how fast both quantities, as the functions of the block length N, simultaneously go to 0. Third, we prove that polar codes are not affected by error floors. To do so, we fix a polar code of block length N and rate R. Then, we vary the channel W and study the impact of this variation on the error probability. We show that the error probability Pe scales as the Bhattacharyya parameter Z(W) raised to a power that scales roughly like VN. This agrees with the scaling in the error exponent regime.},
  author       = {Mondelli, Marco and Hassani, S. Hamed and Urbanke, Rudiger L.},
  issn         = {1557-9654},
  journal      = {IEEE Transactions on Information Theory},
  number       = {12},
  pages        = {6698--6712},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{Unified scaling of polar codes: Error exponent, scaling exponent, moderate deviations, and error floors}},
  doi          = {10.1109/tit.2016.2616117},
  volume       = {62},
  year         = {2016},
}

@inproceedings{6733,
  abstract     = {The question whether RM codes are capacity-achieving is a long-standing open problem in coding theory that was recently answered in the affirmative for transmission over erasure channels [1], [2]. Remarkably, the proof does not rely on specific properties of RM codes, apart from their symmetry. Indeed, the main technical result consists in showing that any sequence of linear codes, with doubly-transitive permutation groups, achieves capacity on the memoryless erasure channel under bit-MAP decoding. Thus, a natural question is what happens under block-MAP decoding. In [1], [2], by exploiting further symmetries of the code, the bit-MAP threshold was shown to be sharp enough so that the block erasure probability also converges to 0. However, this technique relies heavily on the fact that the transmission is over an erasure channel. We present an alternative approach to strengthen results regarding the bit-MAP threshold to block-MAP thresholds. This approach is based on a careful analysis of the weight distribution of RM codes. In particular, the flavor of the main result is the following: assume that the bit-MAP error probability decays as N -δ , for some δ > 0. Then, the block-MAP error probability also converges to 0. This technique applies to transmission over any binary memoryless symmetric channel. Thus, it can be thought of as a first step in extending the proof that RM codes are capacity-achieving to the general case.},
  author       = {Kudekar, Shrinivas and Kumar, Santhosh and Mondelli, Marco and Pfister, Henry D. and Urbankez, Rudiger},
  booktitle    = {2016 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory },
  location     = {Barcelona, Spain},
  pages        = {1755--1759},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{Comparing the bit-MAP and block-MAP decoding thresholds of Reed-Muller codes on BMS channels}},
  doi          = {10.1109/isit.2016.7541600},
  year         = {2016},
}

@inproceedings{6770,
  abstract     = {We describe a new method to compare the bit-MAP and block-MAP decoding thresholds of Reed-Muller (RM) codes for transmission over a binary memoryless symmetric channel. The question whether RM codes are capacity-achieving is a long-standing open problem in coding theory and it has recently been answered in the affirmative for transmission over
erasure channels. Remarkably, the proof does not rely on specific properties of RM codes, apart from their symmetry. Indeed, the main technical result consists in showing that any sequence of linear codes, with doubly-transitive permutation groups, achieves capacity on the memoryless erasure channel under bit-MAP decoding. A natural question is what happens under block-MAP decoding. If the minimum distance of the code family is close to linear (e.g., of order N/ log(N)), then one can combine an upper bound on the bit-MAP error probability with a lower bound on the minimum distance to show that the code family is also capacity-achieving under block-MAP decoding. This strategy is successful for BCH codes. Unfortunately, the minimum distance of RM codes scales only as √N, which does not suffice to obtain the desired result. Then, one can exploit further symmetries of RM codes to show that the bit-MAP threshold is sharp enough so that the block erasure probability also tends to 0. However, this technique relies heavily on the fact that the transmission is over an erasure channel.
We present an alternative approach to strengthen results regarding the bit-MAP threshold to block-MAP thresholds. This approach is based on a careful analysis of the weight distribution of RM codes. In particular, the flavor of the main result is the following: assume that the bit-MAP error probability decays as N−δ, for some δ > 0. Then, the block-MAP
error probability also converges to 0. This technique applies to the transmission over any binary memoryless symmetric channel. Thus, it can be thought of as a first step in extending the proof that RM codes are capacity-achieving to the general case.},
  author       = {Mondelli, Marco and Kudekar, Shrinivas and Kumar, Santosh and Pfister, Henry D. and Şaşoğlu, Eren and Urbanke, Rüdiger},
  booktitle    = {24th International Zurich Seminar on Communications},
  location     = {Zurich, Switzerland},
  pages        = {50},
  publisher    = {ETH Zürich},
  title        = {{Reed-Muller codes: Thresholds and weight distribution}},
  doi          = {10.3929/ETHZ-A-010646484},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{7068,
  abstract     = {Electrons in materials with linear dispersion behave as massless Weyl- or Dirac-quasiparticles, and continue to intrigue due to their close resemblance to elusive ultra-relativistic particles as well as their potential for future electronics. Yet the experimental signatures of Weyl-fermions are often subtle and indirect, in particular if they coexist with conventional, massive quasiparticles. Here we show a pronounced anomaly in the magnetic torque of the Weyl semimetal NbAs upon entering the quantum limit state in high magnetic fields. The torque changes sign in the quantum limit, signalling a reversal of the magnetic anisotropy that can be directly attributed to the topological nature of the Weyl electrons. Our results establish that anomalous quantum limit torque measurements provide a direct experimental method to identify and distinguish Weyl and Dirac systems.},
  author       = {Moll, Philip J. W. and Potter, Andrew C. and Nair, Nityan L. and Ramshaw, B. J. and Modic, Kimberly A and Riggs, Scott and Zeng, Bin and Ghimire, Nirmal J. and Bauer, Eric D. and Kealhofer, Robert and Ronning, Filip and Analytis, James G.},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Magnetic torque anomaly in the quantum limit of Weyl semimetals}},
  doi          = {10.1038/ncomms12492},
  volume       = {7},
  year         = {2016},
}

@article{7069,
  abstract     = {The observation of a reconstructed Fermi surface via quantum oscillations in hole-doped cuprates opened a path towards identifying broken symmetry states in the pseudogap regime. However, such an identification has remained inconclusive due to the multi-frequency quantum oscillation spectra and complications accounting for bilayer effects in most studies. We overcome these impediments with high-resolution measurements on the structurally simpler cuprate HgBa2CuO4+δ (Hg1201), which features one CuO2 plane per primitive unit cell. We find only a single oscillatory component with no signatures of magnetic breakdown tunnelling to additional orbits. Therefore, the Fermi surface comprises a single quasi-two-dimensional pocket. Quantitative modelling of these results indicates that a biaxial charge density wave within each CuO2 plane is responsible for the reconstruction and rules out criss-crossed charge stripes between layers as a viable alternative in Hg1201. Lastly, we determine that the characteristic gap between reconstructed pockets is a significant fraction of the pseudogap energy.},
  author       = {Chan, M. K. and Harrison, N. and McDonald, R. D. and Ramshaw, B. J. and Modic, Kimberly A and Barišić, N. and Greven, M.},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Single reconstructed Fermi surface pocket in an underdoped single-layer cuprate superconductor}},
  doi          = {10.1038/ncomms12244},
  volume       = {7},
  year         = {2016},
}

