@article{12178,
  abstract     = {In this paper we consider the stochastic primitive equation for geophysical flows subject to transport noise and turbulent pressure. Admitting very rough noise terms, the global existence and uniqueness of solutions to this stochastic partial differential equation are proven using stochastic maximal L² regularity, the theory of critical spaces for stochastic evolution equations, and global a priori bounds. Compared to other results in this direction, we do not need any smallness assumption on the transport noise which acts directly on the velocity field and we also allow rougher noise terms. The adaptation to Stratonovich type noise and, more generally, to variable viscosity and/or conductivity are discussed as well.},
  author       = {Agresti, Antonio and Hieber, Matthias and Hussein, Amru and Saal, Martin},
  issn         = {2194-041X},
  journal      = {Stochastics and Partial Differential Equations: Analysis and Computations},
  keywords     = {Applied Mathematics, Modeling and Simulation, Statistics and Probability},
  pages        = {53--133},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{The stochastic primitive equations with transport noise and turbulent pressure}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s40072-022-00277-3},
  volume       = {12},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{13974,
  abstract     = {The Tverberg theorem is one of the cornerstones of discrete geometry. It states that, given a set X of at least (d+1)(r−1)+1 points in Rd, one can find a partition X=X1∪⋯∪Xr of X, such that the convex hulls of the Xi, i=1,…,r, all share a common point. In this paper, we prove a trengthening of this theorem that guarantees a partition which, in addition to the above, has the property that the boundaries of full-dimensional convex hulls have pairwise nonempty intersections. Possible generalizations and algorithmic aspects are also discussed. As a concrete application, we show that any n points in the plane in general position span ⌊n/3⌋ vertex-disjoint triangles that are pairwise crossing, meaning that their boundaries have pairwise nonempty intersections; this number is clearly best possible. A previous result of Álvarez-Rebollar et al. guarantees ⌊n/6⌋pairwise crossing triangles. Our result generalizes to a result about simplices in Rd, d≥2.},
  author       = {Fulek, Radoslav and Gärtner, Bernd and Kupavskii, Andrey and Valtr, Pavel and Wagner, Uli},
  issn         = {1432-0444},
  journal      = {Discrete and Computational Geometry},
  pages        = {831--848},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{The crossing Tverberg theorem}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00454-023-00532-x},
  volume       = {72},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{13975,
  abstract     = {We consider the spectrum of random Laplacian matrices of the form Ln=An−Dn where An
 is a real symmetric random matrix and Dn is a diagonal matrix whose entries are equal to the corresponding row sums of An. If An is a Wigner matrix with entries in the domain of attraction of a Gaussian distribution, the empirical spectral measure of Ln is known to converge to the free convolution of a semicircle distribution and a standard real Gaussian distribution. We consider real symmetric random matrices An with independent entries (up to symmetry) whose row sums converge to a purely non-Gaussian infinitely divisible distribution, which fall into the class of Lévy–Khintchine random matrices first introduced by Jung [Trans Am Math Soc, 370, (2018)]. Our main result shows that the empirical spectral measure of Ln  converges almost surely to a deterministic limit. A key step in the proof is to use the purely non-Gaussian nature of the row sums to build a random operator to which Ln converges in an appropriate sense. This operator leads to a recursive distributional equation uniquely describing the Stieltjes transform of the limiting empirical spectral measure.},
  author       = {Campbell, Andrew J and O’Rourke, Sean},
  issn         = {1572-9230},
  journal      = {Journal of Theoretical Probability},
  pages        = {933--973},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Spectrum of Lévy–Khintchine random laplacian matrices}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s10959-023-01275-4},
  volume       = {37},
  year         = {2024},
}

@inproceedings{14213,
  abstract     = {We introduce a method to segment the visual field into independently moving regions, trained with no ground truth or supervision. It consists of an adversarial conditional encoder-decoder architecture based on Slot Attention, modified to use the image as context to decode optical flow without attempting to reconstruct the image itself. In the resulting multi-modal representation, one modality (flow) feeds the encoder to produce separate latent codes (slots), whereas the other modality (image) conditions the decoder to generate the first (flow) from the slots. This design frees the representation from having to encode complex nuisance variability in the image due to, for instance, illumination and reflectance properties of the scene. Since customary autoencoding based on minimizing the reconstruction error does not preclude the entire flow from being encoded into a single slot, we modify the loss to an adversarial criterion based on Contextual Information Separation. The resulting min-max optimization fosters the separation of objects and their assignment to different attention slots, leading to Divided Attention, or DivA. DivA outperforms recent unsupervised multi-object motion segmentation methods while tripling run-time speed up to 104FPS and reducing the performance gap from supervised methods to 12% or less. DivA can handle different numbers of objects and different image sizes at training and test time, is invariant to permutation of object labels, and does not require explicit regularization.},
  author       = {Lao, Dong and Hu, Zhengyang and Locatello, Francesco and Yang, Yanchao and Soatto, Stefano},
  booktitle    = {1st Conference on Parsimony and Learning},
  location     = {Hong Kong, China},
  title        = {{Divided attention: Unsupervised multi-object discovery with contextually separated slots}},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14251,
  abstract     = {The phytohormone auxin and its directional transport through tissues play a fundamental role in development of higher plants. This polar auxin transport predominantly relies on PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin exporters. Hence, PIN polarization is crucial for development, but its evolution during the rise of morphological complexity in land plants remains unclear. Here, we performed a cross-species investigation by observing the trafficking and localization of endogenous and exogenous PINs in two bryophytes, Physcomitrium patens and Marchantia polymorpha, and in the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana. We confirmed that the GFP fusion did not compromise the auxin export function of all examined PINs by using radioactive auxin export assay and by observing the phenotypic changes in transgenic bryophytes. Endogenous PINs polarize to filamentous apices, while exogenous Arabidopsis PINs distribute symmetrically on the membrane in both bryophytes. In Arabidopsis root epidermis, bryophytic PINs show no defined polarity. Pharmacological interference revealed a strong cytoskeleton dependence of bryophytic but not Arabidopsis PIN polarization. The divergence of PIN polarization and trafficking is also observed within the bryophyte clade and between tissues of individual species. These results collectively reveal a divergence of PIN trafficking and polarity mechanisms throughout land plant evolution and a co-evolution of PIN sequence-based and cell-based polarity mechanisms.},
  author       = {Tang, Han and Lu, KJ and Zhang, Y and Cheng, YL and Tu, SL and Friml, Jiří},
  issn         = {2590-3462},
  journal      = {Plant Communications},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Divergence of trafficking and polarization mechanisms for PIN auxin transporters during land plant evolution}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.xplc.2023.100669},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14345,
  abstract     = {For a locally finite set in R2, the order-k Brillouin tessellations form an infinite sequence of convex face-to-face tilings of the plane. If the set is coarsely dense and generic, then the corresponding infinite sequences of minimum and maximum angles are both monotonic in k. As an example, a stationary Poisson point process in R2  is locally finite, coarsely dense, and generic with probability one. For such a set, the distributions of angles in the Voronoi tessellations, Delaunay mosaics, and Brillouin tessellations are independent of the order and can be derived from the formula for angles in order-1 Delaunay mosaics given by Miles (Math. Biosci. 6, 85–127 (1970)).},
  author       = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Garber, Alexey and Ghafari, Mohadese and Heiss, Teresa and Saghafian, Morteza},
  issn         = {1432-0444},
  journal      = {Discrete and Computational Geometry},
  pages        = {29--48},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{On angles in higher order Brillouin tessellations and related tilings in the plane}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00454-023-00566-1},
  volume       = {72},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14400,
  abstract     = {We consider the problem of computing the maximal probability of satisfying an 
-regular specification for stochastic, continuous-state, nonlinear systems evolving in discrete time. The problem reduces, after automata-theoretic constructions, to finding the maximal probability of satisfying a parity condition on a (possibly hybrid) state space. While characterizing the exact satisfaction probability is open, we show that a lower bound on this probability can be obtained by (I) computing an under-approximation of the qualitative winning region, i.e., states from which the parity condition can be enforced almost surely, and (II) computing the maximal probability of reaching this qualitative winning region.
The heart of our approach is a technique to symbolically compute the under-approximation of the qualitative winning region in step (I) via a finite-state abstraction of the original system as a 
-player parity game. Our abstraction procedure uses only the support of the probabilistic evolution; it does not use precise numerical transition probabilities. We prove that the winning set in the abstract -player game induces an under-approximation of the qualitative winning region in the original synthesis problem, along with a policy to solve it. By combining these contributions with (a) a symbolic fixpoint algorithm to solve 
-player games and (b) existing techniques for reachability policy synthesis in stochastic nonlinear systems, we get an abstraction-based algorithm for finding a lower bound on the maximal satisfaction probability.
We have implemented the abstraction-based algorithm in Mascot-SDS, where we combined the outlined abstraction step with our tool Genie (Majumdar et al., 2023) that solves 
-player parity games (through a reduction to Rabin games) more efficiently than existing algorithms. We evaluated our implementation on the nonlinear model of a perturbed bistable switch from the literature. We show empirically that the lower bound on the winning region computed by our approach is precise, by comparing against an over-approximation of the qualitative winning region. Moreover, our implementation outperforms a recently proposed tool for solving this problem by a large margin.},
  author       = {Majumdar, Rupak and Mallik, Kaushik and Schmuck, Anne Kathrin and Soudjani, Sadegh},
  issn         = {1751-570X},
  journal      = {Nonlinear Analysis: Hybrid Systems},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Symbolic control for stochastic systems via finite parity games}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.nahs.2023.101430},
  volume       = {51},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14408,
  abstract     = {We prove that the mesoscopic linear statistics ∑if(na(σi−z0)) of the eigenvalues {σi}i of large n×n non-Hermitian random matrices with complex centred i.i.d. entries are asymptotically Gaussian for any H20-functions f around any point z0 in the bulk of the spectrum on any mesoscopic scale 0<a<1/2. This extends our previous result (Cipolloni et al. in Commun Pure Appl Math, 2019. arXiv:1912.04100), that was valid on the macroscopic scale, a=0
, to cover the entire mesoscopic regime. The main novelty is a local law for the product of resolvents for the Hermitization of X at spectral parameters z1,z2 with an improved error term in the entire mesoscopic regime |z1−z2|≫n−1/2. The proof is dynamical; it relies on a recursive tandem of the characteristic flow method and the Green function comparison idea combined with a separation of the unstable mode of the underlying stability operator.},
  author       = {Cipolloni, Giorgio and Erdös, László and Schröder, Dominik J},
  issn         = {1432-2064},
  journal      = {Probability Theory and Related Fields},
  pages        = {1131--1182},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Mesoscopic central limit theorem for non-Hermitian random matrices}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00440-023-01229-1},
  volume       = {188},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14435,
  abstract     = {Low‐cost, safe, and environmental‐friendly rechargeable aqueous zinc‐ion batteries (ZIBs) are promising as next‐generation energy storage devices for wearable electronics among other applications. However, sluggish ionic transport kinetics and the unstable electrode structure during ionic insertion/extraction hampers their deployment. Herein,  we propose a new cathode material based on a layered metal chalcogenide (LMC), bismuth telluride (Bi<jats:sub>2</jats:sub>Te<jats:sub>3</jats:sub>), coated with polypyrrole (PPy). Taking advantage of the PPy coating, the Bi<jats:sub>2</jats:sub>Te<jats:sub>3</jats:sub>@PPy composite presents strong ionic absorption affinity, high oxidation resistance, and high structural stability. The ZIBs based on Bi<jats:sub>2</jats:sub>Te<jats:sub>3</jats:sub>@PPy cathodes exhibit high capacities and ultra‐long lifespans of over 5000 cycles. They also present outstanding stability even under bending. In addition,  we analyze here the reaction mechanism using in situ X‐ray diffraction, X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and computational tools and demonstrate that, in the aqueous system, Zn<jats:sup>2+</jats:sup> is not inserted into the cathode as previously assumed. In contrast, proton charge storage dominates the process. Overall, this work not only shows the great potential of LMCs as ZIBs cathode materials and the advantages of PPy coating, but also clarifies the charge/discharge mechanism in rechargeable ZIBs based on LMCs.},
  author       = {Zeng, Guifang and Sun, Qing and Horta, Sharona and Wang, Shang and Lu, Xuan and Zhang, Chaoyue and Li, Jing and Li, Junshan and Ci, Lijie and Tian, Yanhong and Ibáñez, Maria and Cabot, Andreu},
  issn         = {1521-4095},
  journal      = {Advanced Materials},
  keywords     = {Mechanical Engineering, Mechanics of Materials, General Materials Science},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{A layered Bi2Te3@PPy cathode for aqueous zinc ion batteries: Mechanism and application in printed flexible batteries}},
  doi          = {10.1002/adma.202305128},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14447,
  abstract     = {Auxin belongs among major phytohormones and governs multiple aspects of plant growth and development. The establishment of auxin concentration gradients, determines, among other processes, plant organ positioning and growth responses to environmental stimuli.
Herein we report the synthesis of new NBD- or DNS-labelled IAA derivatives and the elucidation of their biological activity, fluorescence properties and subcellular accumulation patterns in planta. These novel compounds did not show auxin-like activity, but instead antagonized physiological auxin effects. The DNS-labelled derivatives FL5 and FL6 showed strong anti-auxin activity in roots and hypocotyls, which also occurred at the level of gene transcription as confirmed by quantitative PCR analysis. The auxin antagonism of our derivatives was further demonstrated in vitro using an SPR-based binding assay. The NBD-labelled compound FL4 with the best fluorescence properties proved to be unsuitable to study auxin accumulation patterns in planta. On the other hand, the strongest anti-auxin activity possessing compounds FL5 and FL6 could be useful to study binding mechanisms to auxin receptors and for manipulations of auxin-regulated processes.},
  author       = {Bieleszová, Kristýna and Hladík, Pavel and Kubala, Martin and Napier, Richard and Brunoni, Federica and Gelová, Zuzana and Fiedler, Lukas and Kulich, Ivan and Strnad, Miroslav and Doležal, Karel and Novák, Ondřej and Friml, Jiří and Žukauskaitė, Asta},
  issn         = {1573-5087},
  journal      = {Plant Growth Regulation},
  pages        = {589--602},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{New fluorescent auxin derivatives: Anti-auxin activity and accumulation patterns in Arabidopsis thaliana}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s10725-023-01083-0},
  volume       = {102},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14451,
  abstract     = {We investigate the potential of Multi-Objective, Deep Reinforcement Learning for stock and cryptocurrency single-asset trading: in particular, we consider a Multi-Objective algorithm which generalizes the reward functions and discount factor (i.e., these components are not specified a priori, but incorporated in the learning process). Firstly, using several important assets (BTCUSD, ETHUSDT, XRPUSDT, AAPL, SPY, NIFTY50), we verify the reward generalization property of the proposed Multi-Objective algorithm, and provide preliminary statistical evidence showing increased predictive stability over the corresponding Single-Objective strategy. Secondly, we show that the Multi-Objective algorithm has a clear edge over the corresponding Single-Objective strategy when the reward mechanism is sparse (i.e., when non-null feedback is infrequent over time). Finally, we discuss the generalization properties with respect to the discount factor. The entirety of our code is provided in open-source format.},
  author       = {Cornalba, Federico and Disselkamp, Constantin and Scassola, Davide and Helf, Christopher},
  issn         = {1433-3058},
  journal      = {Neural Computing and Applications},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {617--637},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Multi-objective reward generalization: Improving performance of Deep Reinforcement Learning for applications in single-asset trading}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00521-023-09033-7},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14463,
  abstract     = {Inversions are thought to play a key role in adaptation and speciation, suppressing recombination between diverging populations. Genes influencing adaptive traits cluster in inversions, and changes in inversion frequencies are associated with environmental differences. However, in many organisms, it is unclear if inversions are geographically and taxonomically widespread. The intertidal snail, Littorina saxatilis, is one such example. Strong associations between putative polymorphic inversions and phenotypic differences have been demonstrated between two ecotypes of L. saxatilis in Sweden and inferred elsewhere, but no direct evidence for inversion polymorphism currently exists across the species range. Using whole genome data from 107 snails, most inversion polymorphisms were found to be widespread across the species range. The frequencies of some inversion arrangements were significantly different among ecotypes, suggesting a parallel adaptive role. Many inversions were also polymorphic in the sister species, L. arcana, hinting at an ancient origin.},
  author       = {Reeve, James and Butlin, Roger K. and Koch, Eva L. and Stankowski, Sean and Faria, Rui},
  issn         = {1365-294X},
  journal      = {Molecular Ecology},
  number       = {24},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Chromosomal inversion polymorphisms are widespread across the species ranges of rough periwinkles (Littorina saxatilis and L. arcana)}},
  doi          = {10.1111/mec.17160},
  volume       = {33},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14478,
  abstract     = {Entire chromosomes are typically only transmitted vertically from one generation to the next. The horizontal transfer of such chromosomes has long been considered improbable, yet gained recent support in several pathogenic fungi where it may affect the fitness or host specificity. To date, it is unknown how these transfers occur, how common they are and whether they can occur between different species. In this study, we show multiple independent instances of horizontal transfers of the same accessory chromosome between two distinct strains of the asexual entomopathogenic fungus<jats:italic>Metarhizium robertsii</jats:italic>during experimental co-infection of its insect host, the Argentine ant. Notably, only the one chromosome – but no other – was transferred from the donor to the recipient strain. The recipient strain, now harboring the accessory chromosome, exhibited a competitive advantage under certain host conditions. By phylogenetic analysis we further demonstrate that the same accessory chromosome was horizontally transferred in a natural environment between<jats:italic>M. robertsii</jats:italic>and another congeneric insect pathogen,<jats:italic>M. guizhouense</jats:italic>. Hence horizontal chromosome transfer is not limited to the observed frequent events within species during experimental infections but also occurs naturally across species. The transferred accessory chromosome contains genes that might be involved in its preferential horizontal transfer, encoding putative histones and histone-modifying enzymes, but also putative virulence factors that may support its establishment. Our study reveals that both intra- and interspecies horizontal transfer of entire chromosomes is more frequent than previously assumed, likely representing a not uncommon mechanism for gene exchange.</jats:p><jats:sec><jats:title>Significance Statement</jats:title><jats:p>The enormous success of bacterial pathogens has been attributed to their ability to exchange genetic material between one another. Similarly, in eukaryotes, horizontal transfer of genetic material allowed the spread of virulence factors across species. The horizontal transfer of whole chromosomes could be an important pathway for such exchange of genetic material, but little is known about the origin of transferable chromosomes and how frequently they are exchanged. Here, we show that the transfer of accessory chromosomes - chromosomes that are non-essential but may provide fitness benefits - is common during fungal co-infections and is even possible between distant pathogenic species, highlighting the importance of horizontal gene transfer via chromosome transfer also for the evolution and function of eukaryotic pathogens.},
  author       = {Habig, Michael and Grasse, Anna V and Müller, Judith and Stukenbrock, Eva H. and Leitner, Hanna and Cremer, Sylvia},
  issn         = {1091-6490},
  journal      = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
  number       = {11},
  publisher    = {National Academy of Sciences},
  title        = {{Frequent horizontal chromosome transfer between asexual fungal insect pathogens}},
  doi          = {10.1073/pnas.2316284121},
  volume       = {121},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14479,
  abstract     = {In animals, parasitic infections impose significant fitness costs.1,2,3,4,5,6 Infected animals can alter their feeding behavior to resist infection,7,8,9,10,11,12 but parasites can manipulate animal foraging behavior to their own benefits.13,14,15,16 How nutrition influences host-parasite interactions is not well understood, as studies have mainly focused on the host and less on the parasite.9,12,17,18,19,20,21,22,23 We used the nutritional geometry framework24 to investigate the role of amino acids (AA) and carbohydrates (C) in a host-parasite system: the Argentine ant, Linepithema humile, and the entomopathogenic fungus, Metarhizium brunneum. First, using 18 diets varying in AA:C composition, we established that the fungus performed best on the high-amino-acid diet 1:4. Second, we found that the fungus reached this optimal diet when given various diet pairings, revealing its ability to cope with nutritional challenges. Third, we showed that the optimal fungal diet reduced the lifespan of healthy ants when compared with a high-carbohydrate diet but had no effect on infected ants. Fourth, we revealed that infected ant colonies, given a choice between the optimal fungal diet and a high-carbohydrate diet, chose the optimal fungal diet, whereas healthy colonies avoided it. Lastly, by disentangling fungal infection from host immune response, we demonstrated that infected ants foraged on the optimal fungal diet in response to immune activation and not as a result of parasite manipulation. Therefore, we revealed that infected ant colonies chose a diet that is costly for survival in the long term but beneficial in the short term—a form of collective self-medication.},
  author       = {Csata, Eniko and Perez-Escudero, Alfonso and Laury, Emmanuel and Leitner, Hanna and Latil, Gerard and Heinze, Juerge and Simpson, Stephen and Cremer, Sylvia and Dussutour, Audrey},
  issn         = {1879-0445},
  journal      = {Current Biology},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {902--909.e6},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Fungal infection alters collective nutritional intake of ant colonies}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.cub.2024.01.017},
  volume       = {34},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14488,
  abstract     = {Portrait viewpoint and illumination editing is an important problem with several applications in VR/AR, movies, and photography. Comprehensive knowledge of geometry and illumination is critical for obtaining photorealistic results. Current methods are unable to explicitly model in 3D while handling both viewpoint and illumination editing from a single image. In this paper, we propose VoRF, a novel approach that can take even a single portrait image as input and relight human heads under novel illuminations that can be viewed from arbitrary viewpoints. VoRF represents a human head as a continuous volumetric field and learns a prior model of human heads using a coordinate-based MLP with individual latent spaces for identity and illumination. The prior model is learned in an auto-decoder manner over a diverse class of head shapes and appearances, allowing VoRF to generalize to novel test identities from a single input image. Additionally, VoRF has a reflectance MLP that uses the intermediate features of the prior model for rendering One-Light-at-A-Time (OLAT) images under novel views. We synthesize novel illuminations by combining these OLAT images with target environment maps. Qualitative and quantitative evaluations demonstrate the effectiveness of VoRF for relighting and novel view synthesis, even when applied to unseen subjects under uncontrolled illumination. This work is an extension of Rao et al. (VoRF: Volumetric Relightable Faces 2022). We provide extensive evaluation and ablative studies of our model and also provide an application, where any face can be relighted using textual input.},
  author       = {Rao, Pramod and Mallikarjun, B. R. and Fox, Gereon and Weyrich, Tim and Bickel, Bernd and Pfister, Hanspeter and Matusik, Wojciech and Zhan, Fangneng and Tewari, Ayush and Theobalt, Christian and Elgharib, Mohamed},
  issn         = {1573-1405},
  journal      = {International Journal of Computer Vision},
  pages        = {1148--1166},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{A deeper analysis of volumetric relightiable faces}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s11263-023-01899-3},
  volume       = {132},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14543,
  abstract     = {The acyl-CoA-binding domain-containing protein 6 (ACBD6) is ubiquitously expressed, plays a role in the acylation of lipids and proteins, and regulates the N-myristoylation of proteins via N-myristoyltransferase enzymes (NMTs). However, its precise function in cells is still unclear, as is the consequence of ACBD6 defects on human pathophysiology. Utilizing exome sequencing and extensive international data sharing efforts, we identified 45 affected individuals from 28 unrelated families (consanguinity 93%) with bi-allelic pathogenic, predominantly loss-of-function (18/20) variants in ACBD6. We generated zebrafish and Xenopus tropicalis acbd6 knockouts by CRISPR/Cas9 and characterized the role of ACBD6 on protein N-myristoylation with YnMyr chemical proteomics in the model organisms and human cells, with the latter also being subjected further to ACBD6 peroxisomal localization studies. The affected individuals (23 males and 22 females), with ages ranging from 1 to 50 years old, typically present with a complex and progressive disease involving moderate-to-severe global developmental delay/intellectual disability (100%) with significant expressive language impairment (98%), movement disorders (97%), facial dysmorphism (95%), and mild cerebellar ataxia (85%) associated with gait impairment (94%), limb spasticity/hypertonia (76%), oculomotor (71%) and behavioural abnormalities (65%), overweight (59%), microcephaly (39%) and epilepsy (33%). The most conspicuous and common movement disorder was dystonia (94%), frequently leading to early-onset progressive postural deformities (97%), limb dystonia (55%), and cervical dystonia (31%). A jerky tremor in the upper limbs (63%), a mild head tremor (59%), parkinsonism/hypokinesia developing with advancing age (32%), and simple motor and vocal tics were among other frequent movement disorders. Midline brain malformations including corpus callosum abnormalities (70%), hypoplasia/agenesis of the anterior commissure (66%), short midbrain and small inferior cerebellar vermis (38% each), as well as hypertrophy of the clava (24%) were common neuroimaging findings. acbd6-deficient zebrafish and Xenopus models effectively recapitulated many clinical phenotypes reported in patients including movement disorders, progressive neuromotor impairment, seizures, microcephaly, craniofacial dysmorphism, and midbrain defects accompanied by developmental delay with increased mortality over time. Unlike ACBD5, ACBD6 did not show a peroxisomal localisation and ACBD6-deficiency was not associated with altered peroxisomal parameters in patient fibroblasts. Significant differences in YnMyr-labelling were observed for 68 co- and 18 post-translationally N-myristoylated proteins in patient-derived fibroblasts. N-Myristoylation was similarly affected in acbd6-deficient zebrafish and Xenopus tropicalis models, including Fus, Marcks, and Chchd-related proteins implicated in neurological diseases. The present study provides evidence that bi-allelic pathogenic variants in ACBD6 lead to a distinct neurodevelopmental syndrome accompanied by complex and progressive cognitive and movement disorders.},
  author       = {Kaiyrzhanov, Rauan and Rad, Aboulfazl and Lin, Sheng-Jia and Bertoli-Avella, Aida and Kallemeijn, Wouter W and Godwin, Annie and Zaki, Maha S and Huang, Kevin and Lau, Tracy and Petree, Cassidy and Efthymiou, Stephanie and Ghayoor Karimiani, Ehsan and Hempel, Maja and Normand, Elizabeth A and Rudnik-Schöneborn, Sabine and Schatz, Ulrich A and Baggelaar, Marc P and Ilyas, Muhammad and Sultan, Tipu and Alvi, Javeria Raza and Ganieva, Manizha and Fowler, Ben and Aanicai, Ruxandra and Akay Tayfun, Gulsen and Al Saman, Abdulaziz and Alswaid, Abdulrahman and Amiri, Nafise and Asilova, Nilufar and Shotelersuk, Vorasuk and Yeetong, Patra and Azam, Matloob and Babaei, Meisam and Bahrami Monajemi, Gholamreza and Mohammadi, Pouria and Samie, Saeed and Banu, Selina Husna and Basto, Jorge Pinto and Kortüm, Fanny and Bauer, Mislen and Bauer, Peter and Beetz, Christian and Garshasbi, Masoud and Hameed Issa, Awatif and Eyaid, Wafaa and Ahmed, Hind and Hashemi, Narges and Hassanpour, Kazem and Herman, Isabella and Ibrohimov, Sherozjon and Abdul-Majeed, Ban A and Imdad, Maria and Isrofilov, Maksudjon and Kaiyal, Qassem and Khan, Suliman and Kirmse, Brian and Koster, Janet and Lourenço, Charles Marques and Mitani, Tadahiro and Moldovan, Oana and Murphy, David and Najafi, Maryam and Pehlivan, Davut and Rocha, Maria Eugenia and Salpietro, Vincenzo and Schmidts, Miriam and Shalata, Adel and Mahroum, Mohammad and Talbeya, Jawabreh Kassem and Taylor, Robert W and Vazquez, Dayana and Vetro, Annalisa and Waterham, Hans R and Zaman, Mashaya and Schrader, Tina A and Chung, Wendy K and Guerrini, Renzo and Lupski, James R and Gleeson, Joseph and Suri, Mohnish and Jamshidi, Yalda and Bhatia, Kailash P and Vona, Barbara and Schrader, Michael and Severino, Mariasavina and Guille, Matthew and Tate, Edward W and Varshney, Gaurav K and Houlden, Henry and Maroofian, Reza},
  issn         = {1460-2156},
  journal      = {Brain},
  keywords     = {Neurology (clinical)},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {1436--1456},
  publisher    = {Oxford University Press},
  title        = {{Bi-allelic ACBD6 variants lead to a neurodevelopmental syndrome with progressive and complex movement disorders}},
  doi          = {10.1093/brain/awad380},
  volume       = {147},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14652,
  abstract     = {In order to demonstrate the stability of newly proposed iridium-based Ir2Cr(In,Sn) and IrRhCr(In,Sn) heusler alloys, we present ab-initio analysis of these alloys by examining various properties to prove their stability. The stability of these alloys can be inferred from different cohesive and formation energies as well as positive phonon frequencies. Their electronic structure results indicate that they are semi-metals in nature. The magnetic moments are computed using the Slater-Pauling formula and exhibit a high value, with the Cr atom contributing the most in all alloys. Mulliken’s charge analysis results show that our alloys contain a range of linkages, mainly ionic and covalent ones. The ductility and mechanical stability of these alloys are confirmed by elastic constants viz. Poisson’s ratio, Pugh’s ratio, and many different types of elastic moduli.},
  author       = {Gupta, Shyam Lal and Singh, Saurabh and Kumar, Sumit and Anupam, Unknown and Thakur, Samjeet Singh and Kumar, Ashish and Panwar, Sanjay and Diwaker, D.},
  issn         = {0921-4526},
  journal      = {Physica B: Condensed Matter},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Ab-initio stability of Iridium based newly proposed full and quaternary heusler alloys}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.physb.2023.415539},
  volume       = {674},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14653,
  abstract     = {Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is a powerful analytical technique for the two-dimensional (2D) localization of chemicals on surfaces. Conventional MSI experiments require to predefine the surface of interest based on photographic or microscopic images. Typically, these boundaries can no longer be changed or adjusted once the experiment has been started. In terms of a more interactive approach we recently developed a pen-like ionization interface which is directly connected to the mass spectrometer. The device allows the user to ionize chemicals by desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) and to freely move the interface over a surface of interest. A mini camera, which is mounted on the tip of the pen, magnifies the desorption area and enables a simple positioning of the pen. The combination of optical data from the camera module and chemical data obtained by mass analysis facilitates a novel type of imaging experiment: interactive mass spectrometry imaging (IMSI). For this application, we present a novel approach for a robust, optical flow-based motion detection. While the live video stream from the camera is used to track the pen's motion across the surface a post-acquisition algorithm correlates the coordinates of the pen trajectory with respective mass spectra obtained from a simultaneous mass spectrometric data acquisition. This algorithm is no longer dependent on a single, manually applied optical marker on the sample surface, which has to be visible on all video frames throughout the analysis. The advanced DESI-IMSI method was successfully tested on inkjet-printed letters as well as mouse brain tissue samples. Validation of the results was done by comparing DESI-IMSI with standard DESI-MSI data.},
  author       = {Kluibenschedl, Florian and Ploner, Anna and Meisenbichler, Christina and Konrat, Robert and Müller, Thomas},
  issn         = {1387-3806},
  journal      = {International Journal of Mass Spectrometry},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Advanced motion tracking for interactive mass spectrometry imaging (IMSI)}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.ijms.2023.117168},
  volume       = {495},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14660,
  abstract     = {The classical Steinitz theorem states that if the origin belongs to the interior of the convex hull of a set 𝑆⊂ℝ𝑑, then there are at most 2𝑑 points of 𝑆 whose convex hull contains the origin in the interior. Bárány, Katchalski,and Pach proved the following quantitative version of Steinitz’s theorem. Let 𝑄 be a convex polytope in ℝ𝑑 containing the standard Euclidean unit ball 𝐁𝑑. Then there exist at most 2𝑑 vertices of 𝑄 whose convex hull 𝑄′ satisfies 𝑟𝐁𝑑⊂𝑄′ with 𝑟⩾𝑑−2𝑑. They conjectured that 𝑟⩾𝑐𝑑−1∕2 holds with a universal constant 𝑐>0. We prove 𝑟⩾15𝑑2, the first polynomial lower bound on 𝑟. Furthermore, we show that 𝑟 is not greater than 2/√𝑑.},
  author       = {Ivanov, Grigory and Naszódi, Márton},
  issn         = {1469-2120},
  journal      = {Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {796--802},
  publisher    = {London Mathematical Society},
  title        = {{Quantitative Steinitz theorem: A polynomial bound}},
  doi          = {10.1112/blms.12965},
  volume       = {56},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{14665,
  abstract     = {We derive lower bounds on the maximal rates for multiple packings in high-dimensional Euclidean spaces. For any N > 0 and L ∈ Z ≥2 , a multiple packing is a set C of points in R n such that any point in R n lies in the intersection of at most L - 1 balls of radius √ nN around points in C . This is a natural generalization of the sphere packing problem. We study the multiple packing problem for both bounded point sets whose points have norm at most √ nP for some constant P > 0, and unbounded point sets whose points are allowed to be anywhere in R n . Given a well-known connection with coding theory, multiple packings can be viewed as the Euclidean analog of list-decodable codes, which are well-studied over finite fields. We derive the best known lower bounds on the optimal multiple packing density. This is accomplished by establishing an inequality which relates the list-decoding error exponent for additive white Gaussian noise channels, a quantity of average-case nature, to the list-decoding radius, a quantity of worst-case nature. We also derive novel bounds on the list-decoding error exponent for infinite constellations and closed-form expressions for the list-decoding error exponents for the power-constrained AWGN channel, which may be of independent interest beyond multiple packing.},
  author       = {Zhang, Yihan and Vatedka, Shashank},
  issn         = {1557-9654},
  journal      = {IEEE Transactions on Information Theory},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {1008--1039},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{Multiple packing: Lower bounds via error exponents}},
  doi          = {10.1109/TIT.2023.3334032},
  volume       = {70},
  year         = {2024},
}

