@phdthesis{14058,
  abstract     = {Females and males across species are subject to divergent selective pressures arising
from di↵erent reproductive interests and ecological niches. This often translates into a
intricate array of sex-specific natural and sexual selection on traits that have a shared
genetic basis between both sexes, causing a genetic sexual conflict. The resolution of
this conflict mostly relies on the evolution of sex-specific expression of the shared genes,
leading to phenotypic sexual dimorphism. Such sex-specific gene expression is thought
to evolve via modifications of the genetic networks ultimately linked to sex-determining
transcription factors. Although much empirical and theoretical evidence supports this
standard picture of the molecular basis of sexual conflict resolution, there still are a
few open questions regarding the complex array of selective forces driving phenotypic
di↵erentiation between the sexes, as well as the molecular mechanisms underlying sexspecific adaptation. I address some of these open questions in my PhD thesis.
First, how do patterns of phenotypic sexual dimorphism vary within populations,
as a response to the temporal and spatial changes in sex-specific selective forces? To
tackle this question, I analyze the patterns of sex-specific phenotypic variation along
three life stages and across populations spanning the whole geographical range of Rumex
hastatulus, a wind-pollinated angiosperm, in the first Chapter of the thesis.
Second, how do gene expression patterns lead to phenotypic dimorphism, and what
are the molecular mechanisms underlying the observed transcriptomic variation? I
address this question by examining the sex- and tissue-specific expression variation in
newly-generated datasets of sex-specific expression in heads and gonads of Drosophila
melanogaster. I additionally used two complementary approaches for the study of the
genetic basis of sex di↵erences in gene expression in the second and third Chapters of
the thesis.
Third, how does intersex correlation, thought to be one of the main aspects constraining the ability for the two sexes to decouple, interact with the evolution of sexual
dimorphism? I develop models of sex-specific stabilizing selection, mutation and drift
to formalize common intuition regarding the patterns of covariation between intersex
correlation and sexual dimorphism in the fourth Chapter of the thesis.
Alltogether, the work described in this PhD thesis provides useful insights into the
links between genetic, transcriptomic and phenotypic layers of sex-specific variation,
and contributes to our general understanding of the dynamics of sexual dimorphism
evolution.},
  author       = {Puixeu Sala, Gemma},
  isbn         = {978-3-99078-035-0},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {230},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{The molecular basis of sexual dimorphism: Experimental and theoretical characterization of phenotypic, transcriptomic and genetic patterns of sex-specific adaptation}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:14058},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{14077,
  abstract     = {The regulatory architecture of gene expression is known to differ substantially between sexes in Drosophila, but most studies performed
so far used whole-body data and only single crosses, which may have limited their scope to detect patterns that are robust across tissues
and biological replicates. Here, we use allele-specific gene expression of parental and reciprocal hybrid crosses between 6 Drosophila
melanogaster inbred lines to quantify cis- and trans-regulatory variation in heads and gonads of both sexes separately across 3 replicate
crosses. Our results suggest that female and male heads, as well as ovaries, have a similar regulatory architecture. On the other hand,
testes display more and substantially different cis-regulatory effects, suggesting that sex differences in the regulatory architecture that
have been previously observed may largely derive from testis-specific effects. We also examine the difference in cis-regulatory variation
of genes across different levels of sex bias in gonads and heads. Consistent with the idea that intersex correlations constrain expression
and can lead to sexual antagonism, we find more cis variation in unbiased and moderately biased genes in heads. In ovaries, reduced cis
variation is observed for male-biased genes, suggesting that cis variants acting on these genes in males do not lead to changes in ovary
expression. Finally, we examine the dominance patterns of gene expression and find that sex- and tissue-specific patterns of inheritance
as well as trans-regulatory variation are highly variable across biological crosses, although these were performed in highly controlled
experimental conditions. This highlights the importance of using various genetic backgrounds to infer generalizable patterns.},
  author       = {Puixeu Sala, Gemma and Macon, Ariana and Vicoso, Beatriz},
  issn         = {2160-1836},
  journal      = {G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics},
  keywords     = {Genetics (clinical), Genetics, Molecular Biology},
  number       = {8},
  publisher    = {Oxford University Press},
  title        = {{Sex-specific estimation of cis and trans regulation of gene expression in heads and gonads of Drosophila melanogaster}},
  doi          = {10.1093/g3journal/jkad121},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{13264,
  abstract     = {We build a parametric amplifier with a Josephson field-effect transistor (JoFET) as the active element. The resonant frequency of the device is field-effect tunable over a range of 2 GHz. The JoFET amplifier has 20 dB of gain, 4 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth, and a 1-dB compression point of -125.5 dBm when operated at a fixed resonance frequency.

},
  author       = {Phan, Duc T and Falthansl-Scheinecker, Paul and Mishra, Umang and Strickland, W. M. and Langone, D. and Shabani, J. and Higginbotham, Andrew P},
  issn         = {2331-7019},
  journal      = {Physical Review Applied},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Gate-tunable superconductor-semiconductor parametric amplifier}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevApplied.19.064032},
  volume       = {19},
  year         = {2023},
}

@misc{12933,
  abstract     = {Datasets of the publication "Sex-specific estimation of cis and trans regulation of gene expression in heads and gonads of Drosophila melanogaster".},
  author       = {Puixeu Sala, Gemma},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Data from: Sex-specific estimation of cis and trans regulation of gene expression in heads and gonads of Drosophila melanogaster}},
  doi          = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:12933},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{12885,
  abstract     = {High-performance semiconductors rely upon precise control of heat and charge transport. This can be achieved by precisely engineering defects in polycrystalline solids. There are multiple approaches to preparing such polycrystalline semiconductors, and the transformation of solution-processed colloidal nanoparticles is appealing because colloidal nanoparticles combine low cost with structural and compositional tunability along with rich surface chemistry. However, the multiple processes from nanoparticle synthesis to the final bulk nanocomposites are very complex. They involve nanoparticle purification, post-synthetic modifications, and finally consolidation (thermal treatments and densification). All these properties dictate the final material’s composition and microstructure, ultimately affecting its functional properties. This thesis explores the synthesis, surface chemistry and consolidation of colloidal semiconductor nanoparticles into dense solids. In particular, the transformations that take place during these processes, and their effect on the material’s transport properties are evaluated. },
  author       = {Calcabrini, Mariano},
  isbn         = {978-3-99078-028-2},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {82},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Nanoparticle-based semiconductor solids: From synthesis to consolidation}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:12885},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{12732,
  abstract     = {Nonergodic systems, whose out-of-equilibrium dynamics fail to thermalize, provide a fascinating research direction both for fundamental reasons and for application in state of the art quantum devices.
Going beyond the description of statistical mechanics, ergodicity breaking yields a new paradigm in quantum many-body physics, introducing novel phases of matter with no counterpart at equilibrium.
In this Thesis, we address different open questions in the field, focusing on disorder-induced many-body localization (MBL) and on weak ergodicity breaking in kinetically constrained models.
In particular, we contribute to the debate about transport in kinetically constrained models, studying the effect of $U(1)$ conservation and inversion-symmetry breaking in a family of quantum East models.
Using tensor network techniques, we analyze the dynamics of large MBL systems beyond the limit of exact numerical methods.
In this setting, we approach the debated topic of the coexistence of localized and thermal eigenstates separated by energy thresholds known as many-body mobility edges.
Inspired by recent experiments, our work further investigates the localization of a small bath induced by the coupling to a large localized chain, the so-called MBL proximity effect.

In the first Chapter, we introduce a family of particle-conserving kinetically constrained models, inspired by the quantum East model.
The system we study features strong inversion-symmetry breaking, due to the nature of the correlated hopping.
We show that these models host so-called quantum Hilbert space fragmentation, consisting of disconnected subsectors in an entangled basis, and further provide an analytical description of this phenomenon.
We further probe its effect on dynamics of simple product states, showing revivals in fidelity and local observalbes.
The study of dynamics within the largest subsector reveals an anomalous transient superdiffusive behavior crossing over to slow logarithmic dynamics at later times.
This work suggests that particle conserving constrained models with inversion-symmetry breaking realize new universality classes of dynamics and invite their further theoretical and experimental studies.

Next, we use kinetic constraints and disorder to design a model with many-body mobility edges in particle density.
This feature allows to study the dynamics of localized and thermal states in large systems beyond the limitations of previous studies.
The time-evolution shows typical signatures of localization at small densities, replaced by thermal behavior at larger densities.
Our results provide evidence in favor of the stability of many-body mobility edges, which was recently challenged by a theoretical argument.
To support our findings, we probe the mechanism proposed as a cause of delocalization in many-body localized systems with mobility edges suggesting its ineffectiveness in the model studied.

In the last Chapter of this Thesis, we address the topic of many-body localization proximity effect.
We study a model inspired by recent experiments, featuring Anderson localized coupled to a small bath of free hard-core bosons.
The interaction among the two particle species results in non-trivial dynamics, which we probe using tensor network techniques.
Our simulations show convincing evidence of many-body localization proximity effect when the bath is composed by a single free particle and interactions are strong.
We furthter observe an anomalous entanglement dynamics, which we explain through a phenomenological theory.
Finally, we extract highly excited eigenstates of large systems, providing supplementary evidence in favor of our findings.},
  author       = {Brighi, Pietro},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {158},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Ergodicity breaking in disordered and kinetically constrained quantum many-body systems}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:12732},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{12826,
  abstract     = {During navigation, animals can infer the structure of the environment by computing the optic flow cues elicited by their own movements, and subsequently use this information to instruct proper locomotor actions. These computations require a panoramic assessment of the visual environment in order to disambiguate similar sensory experiences that may require distinct behavioral responses. The estimation of the global motion patterns is therefore essential for successful navigation. Yet, our understanding of the algorithms and implementations that enable coherent panoramic visual perception remains scarce. Here I pursue this problem by dissecting the functional aspects of interneuronal communication in the lobula plate tangential cell network in Drosophila melanogaster. The results presented in the thesis demonstrate that the basis for effective interpretation of the optic flow in this circuit are stereotyped synaptic connections that mediate the formation of distinct subnetworks, each extracting a particular pattern of global motion. 
Firstly, I show that gap junctions are essential for a correct interpretation of binocular motion cues by horizontal motion-sensitive cells. HS cells form electrical synapses with contralateral H2 neurons that are involved in detecting yaw rotation and translation. I developed an FlpStop-mediated mutant of a gap junction protein ShakB that disrupts these electrical synapses. While the loss of electrical synapses does not affect the tuning of the direction selectivity in HS neurons, it severely alters their sensitivity to horizontal motion in the contralateral side. These physiological changes result in an inappropriate integration of binocular motion cues in walking animals. While wild-type flies form a binocular perception of visual motion by non-linear integration of monocular optic flow cues, the mutant flies sum the monocular inputs linearly. These results indicate that rather than averaging signals in neighboring neurons, gap-junctions operate in conjunction with chemical synapses to mediate complex non-linear optic flow computations.
Secondly, I show that stochastic manipulation of neuronal activity in the lobula plate tangential cell network is a powerful approach to study the neuronal implementation of optic flow-based navigation in flies. Tangential neurons form multiple subnetworks, each mediating course-stabilizing response to a particular global pattern of visual motion. Application of genetic mosaic techniques can provide sparse optogenetic activation of HS cells in numerous combinations. These distinct combinations of activated neurons drive an array of distinct behavioral responses, providing important insights into how visuomotor transformation is performed in the lobula plate tangential cell network. This approach can be complemented by stochastic silencing of tangential neurons, enabling direct assessment of the functional role of individual tangential neurons in the processing of specific visual motion patterns.
	Taken together, the findings presented in this thesis suggest that establishing specific activity patterns of tangential cells via stereotyped synaptic connectivity is a key to efficient optic flow-based navigation in Drosophila melanogaster.},
  author       = {Pokusaeva, Victoria},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {106},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Neural control of optic flow-based navigation in Drosophila melanogaster}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:12826},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{13286,
  abstract     = {Semiconductor-superconductor hybrid systems are the harbour of many intriguing mesoscopic phenomena. This material combination leads to spatial variations of the superconducting properties, which gives rise to Andreev bound states (ABSs). Some of these states might exhibit remarkable properties that render them highly desirable for topological quantum computing. The most prominent and hunted of such states are Majorana zero modes (MZMs), quasiparticles equals to their own quasiparticles that they follow non-abelian statistics. In this thesis, we first introduce the general framework of such hybrid systems and, then, we unveil a series of mesoscopic phenomena that we discovered. Firstly, we show tunneling spectroscopy experiments on full-shell nanowires (NWs) showing that unwanted quantum-dot states coupled to superconductors (Yu-Shiba-Rusinov states) can mimic MZMs signatures. Then, we introduce a novel protocol which allowed the integration of tunneling spectroscopy with Coulomb spectroscopy within the same device. Employing this approach on both full-shell NWs and partial-shell NWs, we demonstrated that longitudinally confined states reveal charge transport phenomenology similar to the one expected for MZMs. These findings shed light on the intricate interplay between superconductivity and quantum confinement, which brought us to explore another material platform, i.e. a two-dimensional Germanium hole gas. After developing a robust way to induce superconductivity in such system, we showed how to engineer the proximity effect and we revealed a superconducting hard gap. Finally, we created a superconducting radio frequency driven ideal diode and a generator of non-sinusoidal current-phase relations. Our results open the path for the exploration of protected superconducting qubits and more complex hybrid devices in planar Germanium, like Kitaev chains and hybrid qubit devices.},
  author       = {Valentini, Marco},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {184},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Mesoscopic phenomena in hybrid semiconductor-superconductor nanodevices : From full-shell nanowires to two-dimensional hole gas in germanium}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:13286},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{14374,
  abstract     = {Superconductivity has many important applications ranging from levitating trains over qubits to MRI scanners. The phenomenon is successfully modeled by Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory. From a mathematical perspective, BCS theory has been studied extensively for systems without boundary. However, little is known in the presence of boundaries. With the help of numerical methods physicists observed that the critical temperature may increase in the presence of a boundary. The goal of this thesis is to understand the influence of boundaries on the critical temperature in BCS theory and to give a first rigorous justification of these observations. On the way, we also study two-body Schrödinger operators on domains with boundaries and prove additional results for superconductors without boundary.

BCS theory is based on a non-linear functional, where the minimizer indicates whether the system is superconducting or in the normal, non-superconducting state. By considering the Hessian of the BCS functional at the normal state, one can analyze whether the normal state is possibly a minimum of the BCS functional and estimate the critical temperature. The Hessian turns out to be a linear operator resembling a Schrödinger operator for two interacting particles, but with more complicated kinetic energy. As a first step, we study the two-body Schrödinger operator in the presence of boundaries.
For Neumann boundary conditions, we prove that the addition of a boundary can create new eigenvalues, which correspond to the two particles forming a bound state close to the boundary.

Second, we need to understand superconductivity in the translation invariant setting. While in three dimensions this has been extensively studied, there is no mathematical literature for the one and two dimensional cases. In dimensions one and two, we compute the weak coupling asymptotics of the critical temperature and the energy gap  in the translation invariant setting. We also prove that their ratio is independent of the microscopic details of the model in the weak coupling limit; this property is referred to as universality.

In the third part, we study the critical temperature of superconductors in the presence of boundaries. We start by considering the one-dimensional case of a half-line with contact interaction. Then, we generalize the results to generic interactions and half-spaces in one, two and three dimensions. Finally, we compare the critical temperature of a quarter space in two dimensions to the critical temperatures of a half-space and of the full space.},
  author       = {Roos, Barbara},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {206},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Boundary superconductivity in BCS theory}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:14374},
  year         = {2023},
}

@unpublished{13312,
  abstract     = {Superconductor/semiconductor hybrid devices have attracted increasing
interest in the past years. Superconducting electronics aims to complement
semiconductor technology, while hybrid architectures are at the forefront of
new ideas such as topological superconductivity and protected qubits. In this
work, we engineer the induced superconductivity in two-dimensional germanium
hole gas by varying the distance between the quantum well and the aluminum. We
demonstrate a hard superconducting gap and realize an electrically and flux
tunable superconducting diode using a superconducting quantum interference
device (SQUID). This allows to tune the current phase relation (CPR), to a
regime where single Cooper pair tunneling is suppressed, creating a $ \sin
\left( 2 \varphi \right)$ CPR. Shapiro experiments complement this
interpretation and the microwave drive allows to create a diode with $ \approx
100 \%$ efficiency. The reported results open up the path towards monolithic
integration of spin qubit devices, microwave resonators and (protected)
superconducting qubits on a silicon technology compatible platform.},
  author       = {Valentini, Marco and Sagi, Oliver and Baghumyan, Levon and Gijsel, Thijs de and Jung, Jason and Calcaterra, Stefano and Ballabio, Andrea and Servin, Juan Aguilera and Aggarwal, Kushagra and Janik, Marian and Adletzberger, Thomas and Souto, Rubén Seoane and Leijnse, Martin and Danon, Jeroen and Schrade, Constantin and Bakkers, Erik and Chrastina, Daniel and Isella, Giovanni and Katsaros, Georgios},
  booktitle    = {arXiv},
  keywords     = {Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics},
  title        = {{Radio frequency driven superconducting diode and parity conserving  Cooper pair transport in a two-dimensional germanium hole gas}},
  doi          = {10.48550/arXiv.2306.07109},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{13207,
  abstract     = {We consider the linear BCS equation, determining the BCS critical temperature, in the presence of a boundary, where Dirichlet boundary conditions are imposed. In the one-dimensional case with point interactions, we prove that the critical temperature is strictly larger than the bulk value, at least at weak coupling. In particular, the Cooper-pair wave function localizes near the boundary, an effect that cannot be modeled by effective Neumann boundary conditions on the order parameter as often imposed in Ginzburg–Landau theory. We also show that the relative shift in critical temperature vanishes if the coupling constant either goes to zero or to infinity.},
  author       = {Hainzl, Christian and Roos, Barbara and Seiringer, Robert},
  issn         = {1664-0403},
  journal      = {Journal of Spectral Theory},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {1507–1540},
  publisher    = {EMS Press},
  title        = {{Boundary superconductivity in the BCS model}},
  doi          = {10.4171/JST/439},
  volume       = {12},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{14539,
  abstract     = {Stochastic systems provide a formal framework for modelling and quantifying uncertainty in systems and have been widely adopted in many application domains. Formal
verification and control of finite state stochastic systems, a subfield of formal methods
also known as probabilistic model checking, is well studied. In contrast, formal verification and control of infinite state stochastic systems have received comparatively
less attention. However, infinite state stochastic systems commonly arise in practice.
For instance, probabilistic models that contain continuous probability distributions such
as normal or uniform, or stochastic dynamical systems which are a classical model for
control under uncertainty, both give rise to infinite state systems.
The goal of this thesis is to contribute to laying theoretical and algorithmic foundations
of fully automated formal verification and control of infinite state stochastic systems,
with a particular focus on systems that may be executed over a long or infinite time.
We consider formal verification of infinite state stochastic systems in the setting of
static analysis of probabilistic programs and formal control in the setting of controller
synthesis in stochastic dynamical systems. For both problems, we present some of the
first fully automated methods for probabilistic (a.k.a. quantitative) reachability and
safety analysis applicable to infinite time horizon systems. We also advance the state
of the art of probability 1 (a.k.a. qualitative) reachability analysis for both problems.
Finally, for formal controller synthesis in stochastic dynamical systems, we present a
novel framework for learning neural network control policies in stochastic dynamical
systems with formal guarantees on correctness with respect to quantitative reachability,
safety or reach-avoid specifications.
},
  author       = {Zikelic, Dorde},
  isbn         = {978-3-99078-036-7},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {256},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Automated verification and control of infinite state stochastic systems}},
  doi          = {10.15479/14539},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{14587,
  abstract     = {This thesis concerns the application of variational methods to the study of evolution problems arising in fluid mechanics and in material sciences. The main focus is on weak-strong stability properties of some curvature driven interface evolution problems, such as the two-phase Navier–Stokes flow with surface tension and multiphase mean curvature flow, and on the phase-field approximation of the latter. Furthermore, we discuss a variational approach to the study of a class of doubly nonlinear wave equations.
First, we consider the two-phase Navier–Stokes flow with surface tension within a bounded domain. The two fluids are immiscible and separated by a sharp interface, which intersects the boundary of the domain at a constant contact angle of ninety degree. We devise a suitable concept of varifolds solutions for the associated interface evolution problem and we establish a weak-strong uniqueness principle in case of a two dimensional ambient space. In order to focus on the boundary effects and on the singular geometry of the evolving domains, we work for simplicity in the regime of same viscosities for the two fluids.
The core of the thesis consists in the rigorous proof of the convergence of the vectorial Allen-Cahn equation towards multiphase mean curvature flow for a suitable class of multi- well potentials and for well-prepared initial data. We even establish a rate of convergence. Our relative energy approach relies on the concept of gradient-flow calibration for branching singularities in multiphase mean curvature flow and thus enables us to overcome the limitations of other approaches. To the best of the author’s knowledge, our result is the first quantitative and unconditional one available in the literature for the vectorial/multiphase setting.
This thesis also contains a first study of weak-strong stability for planar multiphase mean curvature flow beyond the singularity resulting from a topology change. Previous weak-strong results are indeed limited to time horizons before the first topology change of the strong solution. We consider circular topology changes and we prove weak-strong stability for BV solutions to planar multiphase mean curvature flow beyond the associated singular times by dynamically adapting the strong solutions to the weak one by means of a space-time shift.
In the context of interface evolution problems, our proofs for the main results of this thesis are based on the relative energy technique, relying on novel suitable notions of relative energy functionals, which in particular measure the interface error. Our statements follow from the resulting stability estimates for the relative energy associated to the problem.
At last, we introduce a variational approach to the study of nonlinear evolution problems. This approach hinges on the minimization of a parameter dependent family of convex functionals over entire trajectories, known as Weighted Inertia-Dissipation-Energy (WIDE) functionals. We consider a class of doubly nonlinear wave equations and establish the convergence, up to subsequences, of the associated WIDE minimizers to a solution of the target problem as the parameter goes to zero.},
  author       = {Marveggio, Alice},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {228},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Weak-strong stability and phase-field approximation of interface evolution problems in fluid mechanics and in material sciences}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:14587},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{14651,
  abstract     = {For self-incompatibility (SI) to be stable in a population, theory predicts that sufficient inbreeding depression (ID) is required: the fitness of offspring from self-mated individuals must be low enough to prevent the spread of self-compatibility (SC). Reviews of natural plant populations have supported this theory, with SI species generally showing high levels of ID. However, there is thought to be an under-sampling of self-incompatible taxa in the current literature. In this thesis, I study inbreeding depression in the SI plant species Antirrhinum majus using both greenhouse crosses and a large collected field dataset. Additionally, the gametophytic S-locus of A. majus is highly heterozygous and polymorphic, thus making assembly and discovery of S-alleles very difficult. Here, 206 new alleles of the male component SLFs are presented, along with a phylogeny showing the high conservation with alleles from another Antirrhinum species. Lastly, selected sites within the protein structure of SLFs are investigated, with one site in particular highlighted as potentially being involved in the SI recognition mechanism.},
  author       = {Arathoon, Louise S},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {96},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Investigating inbreeding depression and the self-incompatibility locus of Antirrhinum majus}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:14651},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{12726,
  abstract     = {Most motions of many-body systems at any scale in nature with sufficient degrees
of freedom tend to be chaotic; reaching from the orbital motion of planets, the air
currents in our atmosphere, down to the water flowing through our pipelines or
the movement of a population of bacteria. To the observer it is therefore intriguing
when a moving collective exhibits order. Collective motion of flocks of birds, schools
of fish or swarms of self-propelled particles or robots have been studied extensively
over the past decades but the mechanisms involved in the transition from chaos to
order remain unclear. Here, the interactions, that in most systems give rise to chaos,
sustain order. In this thesis we investigate mechanisms that preserve, destabilize
or lead to the ordered state. We show that endothelial cells migrating in circular
confinements transition to a collective rotating state and concomitantly synchronize
the frequencies of nucleating actin waves within individual cells. Consequently,
the frequency dependent cell migration speed uniformizes across the population.
Complementary to the WAVE dependent nucleation of traveling actin waves, we
show that in leukocytes the actin polymerization depending on WASp generates
pushing forces locally at stationary patches. Next, in pipe flows, we study methods
to disrupt the self–sustaining cycle of turbulence and therefore relaminarize the
flow. While we find in pulsating flow conditions that turbulence emerges through a
helical instability during the decelerating phase. Finally, we show quantitatively in
brain slices of mice that wild-type control neurons can compensate the migratory
deficits of a genetically modified neuronal sub–population in the developing cortex.},
  author       = {Riedl, Michael},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {260},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Synchronization in collectively moving active matter}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:12726},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{14530,
  abstract     = {Most motions of many-body systems at any scale in nature with sufficient degrees of freedom tend to be chaotic; reaching from the orbital motion of planets, the air currents in our atmosphere, down to the water flowing through our pipelines or the movement of a population of bacteria. To the observer it is therefore intriguing when a moving collective exhibits order. Collective motion of flocks of birds, schools of fish or swarms of self-propelled particles or robots have been studied extensively over the past decades but the mechanisms involved in the transition from chaos to order remain unclear. Here, the interactions, that in most systems give rise to chaos, sustain order.  In this thesis we investigate mechanisms that preserve, destabilize or lead to the ordered state. We show that endothelial cells migrating in circular confinements transition to a collective rotating state and concomitantly synchronize the frequencies of nucleating actin waves within individual cells. Consequently, the frequency dependent cell migration speed uniformizes across the population. Complementary to the WAVE dependent nucleation of traveling actin waves, we show that in leukocytes the actin polymerization depending on WASp generates pushing forces locally at stationary patches. Next, in pipe flows, we study methods to disrupt the self--sustaining cycle of turbulence and therefore relaminarize the flow. While we find in pulsating flow conditions that turbulence emerges through a helical instability during the decelerating phase. Finally, we show quantitatively in brain slices of mice that wild-type control neurons can compensate the migratory deficits of a genetically modified neuronal sub--population in the developing cortex.  },
  author       = {Riedl, Michael},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  keywords     = {Synchronization, Collective Movement, Active Matter, Cell Migration, Active Colloids},
  pages        = {260},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Synchronization in collectively moving active matter}},
  doi          = {10.15479/14530},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{13331,
  abstract     = {The extension of extremal combinatorics to the setting of exterior algebra is a work
in progress that gained attention recently. In this thesis, we study the combinatorial structure of exterior algebra by introducing a dictionary that translates the notions from the set systems into the framework of exterior algebra. We show both generalizations of celebrated Erdös--Ko--Rado theorem and Hilton--Milner theorem to the setting of exterior algebra in the simplest non-trivial case of two-forms.
},
  author       = {Köse, Seyda},
  issn         = {2791-4585},
  pages        = {26},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Exterior algebra and combinatorics}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:13331},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12680,
  abstract     = {The celebrated Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem about the maximal size of an intersecting family of r-element subsets of  was extended to the setting of exterior algebra in [5, Theorem 2.3] and in [6, Theorem 1.4]. However, the equality case has not been settled yet. In this short note, we show that the extension of the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem and the characterization of the equality case therein, as well as those of the Hilton–Milner theorem to the setting of exterior algebra in the simplest non-trivial case of two-forms follow from a folklore puzzle about possible arrangements of an intersecting family of lines.},
  author       = {Ivanov, Grigory and Köse, Seyda},
  issn         = {0012-365X},
  journal      = {Discrete Mathematics},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Erdős-Ko-Rado and Hilton-Milner theorems for two-forms}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.disc.2023.113363},
  volume       = {346},
  year         = {2023},
}

@phdthesis{13074,
  abstract     = {Deep learning has become an integral part of a large number of important applications, and many of the recent breakthroughs have been enabled by the ability to train very large models, capable to capture complex patterns and relationships from the data. At the same time, the massive sizes of modern deep learning models have made their deployment to smaller devices more challenging; this is particularly important, as in many applications the users rely on accurate deep learning predictions, but they only have access to devices with limited memory and compute power. One solution to this problem is to prune neural networks, by setting as many of their parameters as possible to zero, to obtain accurate sparse models with lower memory footprint. Despite the great research progress in obtaining sparse models that preserve accuracy, while satisfying memory and computational constraints, there are still many challenges associated with efficiently training sparse models, as well as understanding their generalization properties.

The focus of this thesis is to investigate how the training process of sparse models can be made more efficient, and to understand the differences between sparse and dense models in terms of how well they can generalize to changes in the data distribution. We first study a method for co-training sparse and dense models, at a lower cost compared to regular training. With our method we can obtain very accurate sparse networks, and dense models that can recover the baseline accuracy. Furthermore, we are able to more easily analyze the differences, at prediction level, between the sparse-dense model pairs. Next, we investigate the generalization properties of sparse neural networks in more detail, by studying how well different sparse models trained on a larger task can adapt to smaller, more specialized tasks, in a transfer learning scenario. Our analysis across multiple pruning methods and sparsity levels reveals that sparse models provide features that can transfer similarly to or better than the dense baseline. However, the choice of the pruning method plays an important role, and can influence the results when the features are fixed (linear finetuning), or when they are allowed to adapt to the new task (full finetuning). Using sparse models with fixed masks for finetuning on new tasks has an important practical advantage, as it enables training neural networks on smaller devices. However, one drawback of current pruning methods is that the entire training cycle has to be repeated to obtain the initial sparse model, for every sparsity target; in consequence, the entire training process is costly and also multiple models need to be stored. In the last part of the thesis we propose a method that can train accurate dense models that are compressible in a single step, to multiple sparsity levels, without additional finetuning. Our method results in sparse models that can be competitive with existing pruning methods, and which can also successfully generalize to new tasks.},
  author       = {Peste, Elena-Alexandra},
  issn         = {2663-337X},
  pages        = {147},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Efficiency and generalization of sparse neural networks}},
  doi          = {10.15479/at:ista:13074},
  year         = {2023},
}

@inproceedings{13053,
  abstract     = {Deep neural networks (DNNs) often have to be compressed, via pruning and/or quantization, before they can be deployed in practical settings. In this work we propose a new compression-aware minimizer dubbed CrAM that modifies the optimization step in a principled way, in order to produce models whose local loss behavior is stable under compression operations such as pruning. Thus, dense models trained via CrAM should be compressible post-training, in a single step, without significant accuracy loss. Experimental results on standard benchmarks, such as residual networks for ImageNet classification and BERT models for language modelling, show that CrAM produces dense models that can be more accurate than the standard SGD/Adam-based baselines, but which are stable under weight pruning: specifically, we can prune models in one-shot to 70-80% sparsity with almost no accuracy loss, and to 90% with reasonable (∼1%) accuracy loss, which is competitive with gradual compression methods. Additionally, CrAM can produce sparse models which perform well for transfer learning, and it also works for semi-structured 2:4 pruning patterns supported by GPU hardware. The code for reproducing the results is available at this https URL .},
  author       = {Peste, Elena-Alexandra and Vladu, Adrian and Kurtic, Eldar and Lampert, Christoph and Alistarh, Dan-Adrian},
  booktitle    = {11th International Conference on Learning Representations },
  location     = {Kigali, Rwanda },
  publisher    = {OpenReview},
  title        = {{CrAM: A Compression-Aware Minimizer}},
  year         = {2023},
}

