@article{12287,
  abstract     = {We present criteria for establishing a triangulation of a manifold. Given a manifold M, a simplicial complex A, and a map H from the underlying space of A to M, our criteria are presented in local coordinate charts for M, and ensure that H is a homeomorphism. These criteria do not require a differentiable structure, or even an explicit metric on M. No Delaunay property of A is assumed. The result provides a triangulation guarantee for algorithms that construct a simplicial complex by working in local coordinate patches. Because the criteria are easily verified in such a setting, they are expected to be of general use.},
  author       = {Boissonnat, Jean-Daniel and Dyer, Ramsay and Ghosh, Arijit and Wintraecken, Mathijs},
  issn         = {1432-0444},
  journal      = {Discrete & Computational Geometry},
  keywords     = {Computational Theory and Mathematics, Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics, Geometry and Topology, Theoretical Computer Science},
  pages        = {156--191},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Local criteria for triangulating general manifolds}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00454-022-00431-7},
  volume       = {69},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12313,
  abstract     = {Let P be a nontorsion point on an elliptic curve defined over a number field K and consider the sequence {Bn}n∈N of the denominators of x(nP). We prove that every term of the sequence of the Bn has a primitive divisor for n greater than an effectively computable constant that we will explicitly compute. This constant will depend only on the model defining the curve.},
  author       = {Verzobio, Matteo},
  issn         = {0030-8730},
  journal      = {Pacific Journal of Mathematics},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {331--351},
  publisher    = {Mathematical Sciences Publishers},
  title        = {{Some effectivity results for primitive divisors of elliptic divisibility  sequences}},
  doi          = {10.2140/pjm.2023.325.331},
  volume       = {325},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12329,
  abstract     = {In this article, we develop two independent and new approaches to model epidemic spread in a network. Contrary to the most studied models, those developed here allow for contacts with different probabilities of transmitting the disease (transmissibilities). We then examine each of these models using some mean field type approximations. The first model looks at the late-stage effects of an epidemic outbreak and allows for the computation of the probability that a given vertex was infected. This computation is based on a mean field approximation and only depends on the number of contacts and their transmissibilities. This approach shares many similarities with percolation models in networks. The second model we develop is a dynamic model which we analyze using a mean field approximation which highly reduces the dimensionality of the system. In particular, the original system which individually analyses each vertex of the network is reduced to one with as many equations as different transmissibilities. Perhaps the greatest contribution of this article is the observation that, in both these models, the existence and size of an epidemic outbreak are linked to the properties of a matrix which we call the R-matrix. This is a generalization of the basic reproduction number which more precisely characterizes the main routes of infection.},
  author       = {Gómez, Arturo and Oliveira, Goncalo},
  issn         = {2045-2322},
  journal      = {Scientific Reports},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{New approaches to epidemic modeling on networks}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41598-022-19827-9},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12330,
  abstract     = {The design and implementation of efficient concurrent data structures has seen significant attention. However, most of this work has focused on concurrent data structures providing good worst-case guarantees, although, in real workloads, objects are often accessed at different rates. Efficient distribution-adaptive data structures, such as splay-trees, are known in the sequential case; however, they often are hard to translate efficiently to the concurrent case. We investigate distribution-adaptive concurrent data structures, and propose a new design called the splay-list. At a high level, the splay-list is similar to a standard skip-list, with the key distinction that the height of each element adapts dynamically to its access rate: popular elements “move up,” whereas rarely-accessed elements decrease in height. We show that the splay-list provides order-optimal amortized complexity bounds for a subset of operations, while being amenable to efficient concurrent implementation. Experiments show that the splay-list can leverage distribution-adaptivity for performance, and can outperform the only previously-known distribution-adaptive concurrent design in certain workloads.},
  author       = {Aksenov, Vitalii and Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Drozdova, Alexandra and Mohtashami, Amirkeivan},
  issn         = {1432-0452},
  journal      = {Distributed Computing},
  pages        = {395--418},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{The splay-list: A distribution-adaptive concurrent skip-list}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00446-022-00441-x},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12331,
  abstract     = {High carrier mobility is critical to improving thermoelectric performance over a broad temperature range. However, traditional doping inevitably deteriorates carrier mobility. Herein, we develop a strategy for fine tuning of defects to improve carrier mobility. To begin, n-type PbTe is created by compensating for the intrinsic Pb vacancy in bare PbTe. Excess Pb2+ reduces vacancy scattering, resulting in a high carrier mobility of ∼3400 cm2 V–1 s–1. Then, excess Ag is introduced to compensate for the remaining intrinsic Pb vacancies. We find that excess Ag exhibits a dynamic doping process with increasing temperatures, increasing both the carrier concentration and carrier mobility throughout a wide temperature range; specifically, an ultrahigh carrier mobility ∼7300 cm2 V–1 s–1 is obtained for Pb1.01Te + 0.002Ag at 300 K. Moreover, the dynamic doping-induced high carrier concentration suppresses the bipolar thermal conductivity at high temperatures. The final step is using iodine to optimize the carrier concentration to ∼1019 cm–3. Ultimately, a maximum ZT value of ∼1.5 and a large average ZTave value of ∼1.0 at 300–773 K are obtained for Pb1.01Te0.998I0.002 + 0.002Ag. These findings demonstrate that fine tuning of defects with <0.5% impurities can remarkably enhance carrier mobility and improve thermoelectric performance.},
  author       = {Wang, Siqi and Chang, Cheng and Bai, Shulin and Qin, Bingchao and Zhu, Yingcai and Zhan, Shaoping and Zheng, Junqing and Tang, Shuwei and Zhao, Li Dong},
  issn         = {1520-5002},
  journal      = {Chemistry of Materials},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {755--763},
  publisher    = {American Chemical Society},
  title        = {{Fine tuning of defects enables high carrier mobility and enhanced thermoelectric performance of n-type PbTe}},
  doi          = {10.1021/acs.chemmater.2c03542},
  volume       = {35},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12406,
  abstract     = {Let X be a sufficiently large positive integer. We prove that one may choose a subset S of primes with cardinality O(logX) such that a positive proportion of integers less than X can be represented by x2+py2 for at least one p∈S.},
  author       = {Diao, Yijie},
  issn         = {1730-6264},
  journal      = {Acta Arithmetica},
  keywords     = {Algebra, Number Theory},
  pages        = {1--17},
  publisher    = {Instytut Matematyczny},
  title        = {{Density of the union of positive diagonal binary quadratic forms}},
  doi          = {10.4064/aa210830-24-11},
  volume       = {207},
  year         = {2023},
}

@misc{12407,
  abstract     = {As the complexity and criticality of software increase every year, so does the importance of run-time monitoring. Third-party monitoring, with limited knowledge of the monitored software, and best-effort monitoring, which keeps pace with the monitored software, are especially valuable, yet underexplored areas of run-time monitoring. Most existing monitoring frameworks do not support their combination because they either require access to the monitored code for instrumentation purposes or the processing of all observed events, or both.

We present a middleware framework, VAMOS, for the run-time monitoring of software which is explicitly designed to support third-party and best-effort scenarios. The design goals of VAMOS are (i) efficiency (keeping pace at low overhead), (ii) flexibility (the ability to monitor black-box code through a variety of different event channels, and the connectability to monitors written in different specification languages), and (iii) ease-of-use. To achieve its goals, VAMOS combines aspects of event broker and event recognition systems with aspects of stream processing systems.

We implemented a prototype toolchain for VAMOS and conducted experiments including a case study of monitoring for data races. The results indicate that VAMOS enables writing useful yet efficient monitors, is compatible with a variety of event sources and monitor specifications, and simplifies key aspects of setting up a monitoring system from scratch.},
  author       = {Chalupa, Marek and Mühlböck, Fabian and Muroya Lei, Stefanie and Henzinger, Thomas A},
  issn         = {2664-1690},
  keywords     = {runtime monitoring, best effort, third party},
  pages        = {38},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{VAMOS: Middleware for Best-Effort Third-Party Monitoring}},
  doi          = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:12407},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12421,
  abstract     = {The actin cytoskeleton plays a key role in cell migration and cellular morphodynamics in most eukaryotes. The ability of the actin cytoskeleton to assemble and disassemble in a spatiotemporally controlled manner allows it to form higher-order structures, which can generate forces required for a cell to explore and navigate through its environment. It is regulated not only via a complex synergistic and competitive interplay between actin-binding proteins (ABP), but also by filament biochemistry and filament geometry. The lack of structural insights into how geometry and ABPs regulate the actin cytoskeleton limits our understanding of the molecular mechanisms that define actin cytoskeleton remodeling and, in turn, impact emerging cell migration characteristics. With the advent of cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and advanced computational methods, it is now possible to define these molecular mechanisms involving actin and its interactors at both atomic and ultra-structural levels in vitro and in cellulo. In this review, we will provide an overview of the available cryo-EM methods, applicable to further our understanding of the actin cytoskeleton, specifically in the context of cell migration. We will discuss how these methods have been employed to elucidate ABP- and geometry-defined regulatory mechanisms in initiating, maintaining, and disassembling cellular actin networks in migratory protrusions.},
  author       = {Fäßler, Florian and Javoor, Manjunath and Schur, Florian KM},
  issn         = {1470-8752},
  journal      = {Biochemical Society Transactions},
  keywords     = {Biochemistry},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {87--99},
  publisher    = {Portland Press},
  title        = {{Deciphering the molecular mechanisms of actin cytoskeleton regulation in cell migration using cryo-EM}},
  doi          = {10.1042/bst20220221},
  volume       = {51},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12427,
  abstract     = {Let k be a number field and X a smooth, geometrically integral quasi-projective variety over k. For any linear algebraic group G over k and any G-torsor g : Z → X, we observe that if the étale-Brauer obstruction is the only one for strong approximation off a finite set of places S for all twists of Z by elements in H^1(k, G), then the étale-Brauer obstruction is the only one for strong approximation off a finite set of places S for X. As an application, we show that any homogeneous space of the form G/H with G a connected linear algebraic group over k satisfies strong approximation off the infinite places with étale-Brauer obstruction, under some compactness assumptions when k is totally real. We also prove more refined strong approximation results for homogeneous spaces of the form G/H with G semisimple simply connected and H finite, using the theory of torsors and descent.},
  author       = {Balestrieri, Francesca},
  issn         = {1088-6826},
  journal      = {Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society},
  number       = {3},
  pages        = {907--914},
  publisher    = {American Mathematical Society},
  title        = {{Some remarks on strong approximation and applications to homogeneous spaces of linear algebraic groups}},
  doi          = {10.1090/proc/15239},
  volume       = {151},
  year         = {2023},
}

@inbook{12428,
  abstract     = {The mammary gland consists of a bilayered epithelial structure with an extensively branched morphology. The majority of this epithelial tree is laid down during puberty, during which actively proliferating terminal end buds repeatedly elongate and bifurcate to form the basic structure of the ductal tree. Mammary ducts consist of a basal and luminal cell layer with a multitude of identified sub-lineages within both layers. The understanding of how these different cell lineages are cooperatively driving branching morphogenesis is a problem of crossing multiple scales, as this requires information on the macroscopic branched structure of the gland, as well as data on single-cell dynamics driving the morphogenic program. Here we describe a method to combine genetic lineage tracing with whole-gland branching analysis. Quantitative data on the global organ structure can be used to derive a model for mammary gland branching morphogenesis and provide a backbone on which the dynamics of individual cell lineages can be simulated and compared to lineage-tracing approaches. Eventually, these quantitative models and experiments allow to understand the couplings between the macroscopic shape of the mammary gland and the underlying single-cell dynamics driving branching morphogenesis.},
  author       = {Hannezo, Edouard B and Scheele, Colinda L.G.J.},
  booktitle    = {Cell Migration in Three Dimensions},
  editor       = {Margadant, Coert},
  isbn         = {9781071628867},
  issn         = {1940-6029},
  pages        = {183--205},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{A Guide Toward Multi-scale and Quantitative Branching Analysis in the Mammary Gland}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-1-0716-2887-4_12},
  volume       = {2608},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12429,
  abstract     = {In this paper, we consider traces at initial times for functions with mixed time-space smoothness. Such results are often needed in the theory of evolution equations. Our result extends and unifies many previous results. Our main improvement is that we can allow general interpolation couples. The abstract results are applied to regularity problems for fractional evolution equations and stochastic evolution equations, where uniform trace estimates on the half-line are shown.},
  author       = {Agresti, Antonio and Lindemulder, Nick and Veraar, Mark},
  issn         = {1522-2616},
  journal      = {Mathematische Nachrichten},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {1319--1350},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{On the trace embedding and its applications to evolution equations}},
  doi          = {10.1002/mana.202100192},
  volume       = {296},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12430,
  abstract     = {We study the time evolution of the Nelson model in a mean-field limit in which N nonrelativistic bosons weakly couple (with respect to the particle number) to a positive or zero mass quantized scalar field. Our main result is the derivation of the Bogoliubov dynamics and higher-order corrections. More precisely, we prove the convergence of the approximate wave function to the many-body wave function in norm, with a convergence rate proportional to the number of corrections taken into account in the approximation. We prove an analogous result for the unitary propagator. As an application, we derive a simple system of partial differential equations describing the time evolution of the first- and second-order approximations to the one-particle reduced density matrices of the particles and the quantum field, respectively.},
  author       = {Falconi, Marco and Leopold, Nikolai K and Mitrouskas, David Johannes and Petrat, Sören P},
  issn         = {0129-055X},
  journal      = {Reviews in Mathematical Physics},
  number       = {4},
  publisher    = {World Scientific Publishing},
  title        = {{Bogoliubov dynamics and higher-order corrections for the regularized Nelson model}},
  doi          = {10.1142/S0129055X2350006X},
  volume       = {35},
  year         = {2023},
}

@inproceedings{12467,
  abstract     = {Safety and liveness are elementary concepts of computation, and the foundation of many verification paradigms. The safety-liveness classification of boolean properties characterizes whether a given property can be falsified by observing a finite prefix of an infinite computation trace (always for safety, never for liveness). In quantitative specification and verification, properties assign not truth values, but quantitative values to infinite traces (e.g., a cost, or the distance to a boolean property). We introduce quantitative safety and liveness, and we prove that our definitions induce conservative quantitative generalizations of both (1)~the safety-progress hierarchy of boolean properties and (2)~the safety-liveness decomposition of boolean properties. In particular, we show that every quantitative property can be written as the pointwise minimum of a quantitative safety property and a quantitative liveness property. Consequently, like boolean properties, also quantitative properties can be min-decomposed into safety and liveness parts, or alternatively, max-decomposed into co-safety and co-liveness parts. Moreover, quantitative properties can be approximated naturally. We prove that every quantitative property that has both safe and co-safe approximations can be monitored arbitrarily precisely by a monitor that uses only a finite number of states.},
  author       = {Henzinger, Thomas A and Mazzocchi, Nicolas Adrien and Sarac, Naci E},
  booktitle    = {26th International Conference Foundations of Software Science and Computation Structures},
  isbn         = {9783031308284},
  issn         = {1611-3349},
  location     = {Paris, France},
  pages        = {349--370},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Quantitative safety and liveness}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-031-30829-1_17},
  volume       = {13992},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12469,
  abstract     = {Hosts can carry many viruses in their bodies, but not all of them cause disease. We studied ants as a social host to determine both their overall viral repertoire and the subset of actively infecting viruses across natural populations of three subfamilies: the Argentine ant (Linepithema humile, Dolichoderinae), the invasive garden ant (Lasius neglectus, Formicinae) and the red ant (Myrmica rubra, Myrmicinae). We used a dual sequencing strategy to reconstruct complete virus genomes by RNA-seq and to simultaneously determine the small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) by small RNA sequencing (sRNA-seq), which constitute the host antiviral RNAi immune response. This approach led to the discovery of 41 novel viruses in ants and revealed a host ant-specific RNAi response (21 vs. 22 nt siRNAs) in the different ant species. The efficiency of the RNAi response (sRNA/RNA read count ratio) depended on the virus and the respective ant species, but not its population. Overall, we found the highest virus abundance and diversity per population in Li. humile, followed by La. neglectus and M. rubra. Argentine ants also shared a high proportion of viruses between populations, whilst overlap was nearly absent in M. rubra. Only one of the 59 viruses was found to infect two of the ant species as hosts, revealing high host-specificity in active infections. In contrast, six viruses actively infected one ant species, but were found as contaminants only in the others. Disentangling spillover of disease-causing infection from non-infecting contamination across species is providing relevant information for disease ecology and ecosystem management.},
  author       = {Viljakainen, Lumi and Fürst, Matthias and Grasse, Anna V and Jurvansuu, Jaana and Oh, Jinook and Tolonen, Lassi and Eder, Thomas and Rattei, Thomas and Cremer, Sylvia},
  issn         = {1664-302X},
  journal      = {Frontiers in Microbiology},
  publisher    = {Frontiers},
  title        = {{Antiviral immune response reveals host-specific virus infections in natural ant populations}},
  doi          = {10.3389/fmicb.2023.1119002},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12478,
  abstract     = {In Gram negative bacteria, the multiple antibiotic resistance or mar operon, is known to control the expression of multi-drug efflux genes that protect bacteria from a wide range of drugs. As many different chemical compounds can induce this operon, identifying the parameters that govern the dynamics of its induction is crucial to better characterize the processes of tolerance and resistance. Most experiments have assumed that the properties of the mar transcriptional network can be inferred from population measurements. However, measurements from an asynchronous population of cells can mask underlying phenotypic variations of single cells. We monitored the activity of the mar promoter in single Escherichia coli cells in linear micro-colonies and established that the response to a steady level of inducer was most heterogeneous within individual colonies for an intermediate value of inducer. Specifically, sub-lineages defined by contiguous daughter-cells exhibited similar promoter activity, whereas activity was greatly variable between different sub-lineages. Specific sub-trees of uniform promoter activity persisted over several generations. Statistical analyses of the lineages suggest that the presence of these sub-trees is the signature of an inducible memory of the promoter state that is transmitted from mother to daughter cells. This single-cell study reveals that the degree of epigenetic inheritance changes as a function of inducer concentration, suggesting that phenotypic inheritance may be an inducible phenotype.},
  author       = {Guet, Calin C and Bruneaux, L and Oikonomou, P and Aldana, M and Cluzel, P},
  issn         = {1664-302X},
  journal      = {Frontiers in Microbiology},
  publisher    = {Frontiers},
  title        = {{Monitoring lineages of growing and dividing bacteria reveals an inducible memory of <i>mar</i> operon expression}},
  doi          = {10.3389/fmicb.2023.1049255},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12487,
  abstract     = {Sleep plays a key role in preserving brain function, keeping the brain network in a state that ensures optimal computational capabilities. Empirical evidence indicates that such a state is consistent with criticality, where scale-free neuronal avalanches emerge. However, the relationship between sleep, emergent avalanches, and criticality remains poorly understood. Here we fully characterize the critical behavior of avalanches during sleep, and study their relationship with the sleep macro- and micro-architecture, in particular the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP). We show that avalanche size and duration distributions exhibit robust power laws with exponents approximately equal to −3/2 e −2, respectively. Importantly, we find that sizes scale as a power law of the durations, and that all critical exponents for neuronal avalanches obey robust scaling relations, which are consistent with the mean-field directed percolation universality class. Our analysis demonstrates that avalanche dynamics depends on the position within the NREM-REM cycles, with the avalanche density increasing in the descending phases and decreasing in the ascending phases of sleep cycles. Moreover, we show that, within NREM sleep, avalanche occurrence correlates with CAP activation phases, particularly A1, which are the expression of slow wave sleep propensity and have been proposed to be beneficial for cognitive processes. The results suggest that neuronal avalanches, and thus tuning to criticality, actively contribute to sleep development and play a role in preserving network function. Such findings, alongside characterization of the universality class for avalanches, open new avenues to the investigation of functional role of criticality during sleep with potential clinical application.</jats:p><jats:sec><jats:title>Significance statement</jats:title><jats:p>We fully characterize the critical behavior of neuronal avalanches during sleep, and show that avalanches follow precise scaling laws that are consistent with the mean-field directed percolation universality class. The analysis provides first evidence of a functional relationship between avalanche occurrence, slow-wave sleep dynamics, sleep stage transitions and occurrence of CAP phase A during NREM sleep. Because CAP is considered one of the major guardians of NREM sleep that allows the brain to dynamically react to external perturbation and contributes to the cognitive consolidation processes occurring in sleep, our observations suggest that neuronal avalanches at criticality are associated with flexible response to external inputs and to cognitive processes, a key assumption of the critical brain hypothesis.},
  author       = {Scarpetta, Silvia and Morrisi, Niccolò and Mutti, Carlotta and Azzi, Nicoletta and Trippi, Irene and Ciliento, Rosario and Apicella, Ilenia and Messuti, Giovanni and Angiolelli, Marianna and Lombardi, Fabrizio and Parrino, Liborio and Vaudano, Anna Elisabetta},
  issn         = {2589-0042},
  journal      = {iScience},
  number       = {10},
  pages        = {107840},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Criticality of neuronal avalanches in human sleep and their relationship with sleep macro- and micro-architecture}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.isci.2023.107840},
  volume       = {26},
  year         = {2023},
}

@misc{12497,
  abstract     = {Aromatic side chains are important reporters of the plasticity of proteins, and often form important contacts in protein–protein interactions. We studied aromatic residues in the two structurally homologous cross-β amyloid fibrils HET-s, and  HELLF by employing a specific isotope-labeling approach and magic-angle-spinning NMR. The dynamic behavior of the aromatic residues Phe and Tyr indicates that the hydrophobic amyloid core is rigid, without any sign of "breathing motions" over hundreds of milliseconds at least. Aromatic residues exposed at the fibril surface have a rigid ring axis but undergo ring flips on a variety of time scales from nanoseconds to microseconds. Our approach provides direct insight into hydrophobic-core motions, enabling a better evaluation of the conformational heterogeneity generated from an NMR structural ensemble of such amyloid cross-β architecture.},
  author       = {Becker, Lea Marie and Schanda, Paul},
  keywords     = {aromatic side chains, isotopic labeling, protein dynamics, ring flips, spin relaxation},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Research data to: The rigid core and flexible surface of amyloid fibrils probed by magic-angle-spinning NMR spectroscopy of aromatic residues}},
  doi          = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:12497},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12514,
  abstract     = {The concept of a “speciation continuum” has gained popularity in recent decades. It emphasizes speciation as a continuous process that may be studied by comparing contemporary population pairs that show differing levels of divergence. In their recent perspective article in Evolution, Stankowski and Ravinet provided a valuable service by formally defining the speciation continuum as a continuum of reproductive isolation, based on opinions gathered from a survey of speciation researchers. While we agree that the speciation continuum has been a useful concept to advance the understanding of the speciation process, some intrinsic limitations exist. Here, we advocate for a multivariate extension, the speciation hypercube, first proposed by Dieckmann et al. in 2004, but rarely used since. We extend the idea of the speciation cube and suggest it has strong conceptual and practical advantages over a one-dimensional model. We illustrate how the speciation hypercube can be used to visualize and compare different speciation trajectories, providing new insights into the processes and mechanisms of speciation. A key strength of the speciation hypercube is that it provides a unifying framework for speciation research, as it allows questions from apparently disparate subfields to be addressed in a single conceptual model.},
  author       = {Bolnick, Daniel I. and Hund, Amanda K. and Nosil, Patrik and Peng, Foen and Ravinet, Mark and Stankowski, Sean and Subramanian, Swapna and Wolf, Jochen B.W. and Yukilevich, Roman},
  issn         = {1558-5646},
  journal      = {Evolution: International journal of organic evolution},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {318--328},
  publisher    = {Oxford University Press},
  title        = {{A multivariate view of the speciation continuum}},
  doi          = {10.1093/evolut/qpac004},
  volume       = {77},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12515,
  abstract     = {Introduction: The olfactory system in most mammals is divided into several subsystems based on the anatomical locations of the neuroreceptor cells involved and the receptor families that are expressed. In addition to the main olfactory system and the vomeronasal system, a range of olfactory subsystems converge onto the transition zone located between the main olfactory bulb (MOB) and the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB), which has been termed the olfactory limbus (OL). The OL contains specialized glomeruli that receive noncanonical sensory afferences and which interact with the MOB and AOB. Little is known regarding the olfactory subsystems of mammals other than laboratory rodents.
Methods: We have focused on characterizing the OL in the red fox by performing general and specific histological stainings on serial sections, using both single and double immunohistochemical and lectin-histochemical labeling techniques.
Results: As a result, we have been able to determine that the OL of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) displays an uncommonly high degree of development and complexity.
Discussion: This makes this species a novel mammalian model, the study of which could improve our understanding of the noncanonical pathways involved in the processing of chemosensory cues.},
  author       = {Ortiz-Leal, Irene and Torres, Mateo V. and Vargas Barroso, Victor M and Fidalgo, Luis Eusebio and López-Beceiro, Ana María and Larriva-Sahd, Jorge A. and Sánchez-Quinteiro, Pablo},
  issn         = {1662-5129},
  journal      = {Frontiers in Neuroanatomy},
  publisher    = {Frontiers},
  title        = {{The olfactory limbus of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes). New insights regarding a noncanonical olfactory bulb pathway}},
  doi          = {10.3389/fnana.2022.1097467},
  volume       = {16},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{12534,
  abstract     = {Brownian motion of a mobile impurity in a bath is affected by spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Here, we discuss a Caldeira-Leggett-type model that can be used to propose and interpret quantum simulators of this problem in cold Bose gases. First, we derive a master equation that describes the model and explore it in a one-dimensional (1D) setting. To validate the standard assumptions needed for our derivation, we analyze available experimental data without SOC; as a byproduct, this analysis suggests that the quench dynamics of the impurity is beyond the 1D Bose-polaron approach at temperatures currently accessible in a cold-atom laboratory—motion of the impurity is mainly driven by dissipation. For systems with SOC, we demonstrate that 1D spin-orbit coupling can be gauged out even in the presence of dissipation—the information about SOC is incorporated in the initial conditions. Observables sensitive to this information (such as spin densities) can be used to study formation of steady spin polarization domains during quench dynamics.},
  author       = {Ghazaryan, Areg and Cappellaro, Alberto and Lemeshko, Mikhail and Volosniev, Artem},
  issn         = {2643-1564},
  journal      = {Physical Review Research},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Dissipative dynamics of an impurity with spin-orbit coupling}},
  doi          = {10.1103/physrevresearch.5.013029},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2023},
}

