@article{445,
  abstract     = {The Loschmidt echo, defined as the overlap between quantum wave function evolved with different Hamiltonians, quantifies the sensitivity of quantum dynamics to perturbations and is often used as a probe of quantum chaos. In this work we consider the behavior of the Loschmidt echo in the many-body localized phase, which is characterized by emergent local integrals of motion and provides a generic example of nonergodic dynamics. We demonstrate that the fluctuations of the Loschmidt echo decay as a power law in time in the many-body localized phase, in contrast to the exponential decay in few-body ergodic systems. We consider the spin-echo generalization of the Loschmidt echo and argue that the corresponding correlation function saturates to a finite value in localized systems. Slow, power-law decay of fluctuations of such spin-echo-type overlap is related to the operator spreading and is present only in the many-body localized phase, but not in a noninteracting Anderson insulator. While most of the previously considered probes of dephasing dynamics could be understood by approximating physical spin operators with local integrals of motion, the Loschmidt echo and its generalizations crucially depend on the full expansion of the physical operators via local integrals of motion operators, as well as operators which flip local integrals of motion. Hence these probes allow one to get insights into the relation between physical operators and local integrals of motion and access the operator spreading in the many-body localized phase.},
  author       = {Serbyn, Maksym and Abanin, Dimitry},
  journal      = {Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Loschmidt echo in many body localized phases}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevB.96.014202},
  volume       = {96},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{447,
  abstract     = {We consider last passage percolation (LPP) models with exponentially distributed random variables, which are linked to the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process (TASEP). The competition interface for LPP was introduced and studied in Ferrari and Pimentel (2005a) for cases where the corresponding exclusion process had a rarefaction fan. Here we consider situations with a shock and determine the law of the fluctuations of the competition interface around its deter- ministic law of large number position. We also study the multipoint distribution of the LPP around the shock, extending our one-point result of Ferrari and Nejjar (2015).},
  author       = {Ferrari, Patrik and Nejjar, Peter},
  journal      = {Revista Latino-Americana de Probabilidade e Estatística},
  pages        = {299 -- 325},
  publisher    = {Instituto Nacional de Matematica Pura e Aplicada},
  title        = {{Fluctuations of the competition interface in presence of shocks}},
  doi          = {10.30757/ALEA.v14-17},
  volume       = {9},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{452,
  abstract     = {Spinning tops and yo-yos have long fascinated cultures around the world with their unexpected, graceful motions that seemingly elude gravity. Yet, due to the exceeding difficulty of creating stably spinning objects of asymmetric shape in a manual trial-and-error process, there has been little departure from rotationally symmetric designs. With modern 3D printing technologies, however, we can manufacture shapes of almost unbounded complexity at the press of a button, shifting this design complexity toward computation. In this article, we describe an algorithm to generate designs for spinning objects by optimizing their mass distribution: as input, the user provides a solid 3D model and a desired axis of rotation. Our approach then modifies the interior mass distribution such that the principal directions of the moment of inertia align with the target rotation frame. To create voids inside the model, we represent its volume with an adaptive multiresolution voxelization and optimize the discrete voxel fill values using a continuous, nonlinear formulation. We further optimize for rotational stability by maximizing the dominant principal moment. Our method is well-suited for a variety of 3D printed models, ranging from characters to abstract shapes. We demonstrate tops and yo-yos that spin surprisingly stably despite their asymmetric appearance.},
  author       = {Bächer, Moritz and Bickel, Bernd and Whiting, Emily and Sorkine Hornung, Olga},
  journal      = {Communications of the ACM},
  number       = {8},
  pages        = {92 -- 99},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{Spin it: Optimizing moment of inertia for spinnable objects}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3068766},
  volume       = {60},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{453,
  abstract     = {Most kinesin motors move in only one direction along microtubules. Members of the kinesin-5 subfamily were initially described as unidirectional plus-end-directed motors and shown to produce piconewton forces. However, some fungal kinesin-5 motors are bidirectional. The force production of a bidirectional kinesin-5 has not yet been measured. Therefore, it remains unknown whether the mechanism of the unconventional minus-end-directed motility differs fundamentally from that of plus-end-directed stepping. Using force spectroscopy, we have measured here the forces that ensembles of purified budding yeast kinesin-5 Cin8 produce in microtubule gliding assays in both plus- and minus-end direction. Correlation analysis of pause forces demonstrated that individual Cin8 molecules produce additive forces in both directions of movement. In ensembles, Cin8 motors were able to produce single-motor forces up to a magnitude of ∼1.5 pN. Hence, these properties appear to be conserved within the kinesin-5 subfamily. Force production was largely independent of the directionality of movement, indicating similarities between the motility mechanisms for both directions. These results provide constraints for the development of models for the bidirectional motility mechanism of fission yeast kinesin-5 and provide insight into the function of this mitotic motor.},
  author       = {Fallesen, Todd and Roostalu, Johanna and Düllberg, Christian F and Pruessner, Gunnar and Surrey, Thomas},
  issn         = {1542-0086},
  journal      = {Biophysical Journal},
  number       = {9},
  pages        = {2055 -- 2067},
  publisher    = {Biophysical Society},
  title        = {{Ensembles of bidirectional kinesin Cin8 produce additive forces in both directions of movement}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.bpj.2017.09.006},
  volume       = {113},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{459,
  abstract     = {The social insects bees, wasps, ants, and termites are species-rich, occur in many habitats, and often constitute a large part of the biomass. Many are also invasive, including species of termites, the red imported fire ant, and the Argentine ant. While invasive social insects have been a problem in Southern Europe for some time, Central Europa was free of invasive ant species until recently because most ants are adapted to warmer climates. Only in the 1990s, did Lasius neglectus, a close relative of the common black garden ant, arrive in Germany. First described in 1990 based on individuals collected in Budapest, the species has since been detected for example in France, Germany, Spain, England, and Kyrgyzstan. The species is spread with soil during construction work or plantings, and L. neglectus therefore is often found in parks and botanical gardens. Another invasive ant now spreading in southern Germany is Formica fuscocinerea, which occurs along rivers, including in the sandy floodplains of the river Isar. As is typical of pioneer species, F. fuscocinerea quickly becomes extremely abundant and therefore causes problems for example on playgrounds in Munich. All invasive ant species are characterized by cooperation across nests, leading to strongly interconnected, very large super-colonies. The resulting dominance results in the extinction of native ant species as well as other arthropod species and thus in the reduction of biodiversity.},
  author       = {Cremer, Sylvia},
  issn         = {2366-2875},
  journal      = {Rundgespräche Forum Ökologie},
  pages        = {105 -- 116},
  publisher    = {Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil},
  title        = {{Invasive Ameisen in Europa: Wie sie sich ausbreiten und die heimische Fauna verändern}},
  volume       = {46},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{12193,
  abstract     = {DNA methylation regulates eukaryotic gene expression and is extensively reprogrammed during animal development. However, whether developmental methylation reprogramming during the sporophytic life cycle of flowering plants regulates genes is presently unknown. Here we report a distinctive gene-targeted RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) activity in the Arabidopsis thaliana male sexual lineage that regulates gene expression in meiocytes. Loss of sexual-lineage-specific RdDM causes mis-splicing of the MPS1 gene (also known as PRD2), thereby disrupting meiosis. Our results establish a regulatory paradigm in which de novo methylation creates a cell-lineage-specific epigenetic signature that controls gene expression and contributes to cellular function in flowering plants.},
  author       = {Walker, James and Gao, Hongbo and Zhang, Jingyi and Aldridge, Billy and Vickers, Martin and Higgins, James D. and Feng, Xiaoqi},
  issn         = {1546-1718},
  journal      = {Nature Genetics},
  keywords     = {Genetics},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {130--137},
  publisher    = {Nature Research},
  title        = {{Sexual-lineage-specific DNA methylation regulates meiosis in Arabidopsis}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41588-017-0008-5},
  volume       = {50},
  year         = {2017},
}

@proceedings{638,
  abstract     = {This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 9th InternationalWorkshop on Numerical Software Verification, NSV 2016, held in Toronto, ON, Canada in July 2011 - colocated with CAV 2016, the 28th International Conference on Computer Aided Verification.
The NSV workshop is dedicated to the development of logical and mathematical techniques for the reasoning about programmability and reliability.},
  editor       = {Bogomolov, Sergiy and Martel, Matthieu and Prabhakar, Pavithra},
  issn         = {0302-9743},
  location     = {Toronto, ON, Canada},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Numerical Software Verification}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-319-54292-8},
  volume       = {10152},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inbook{649,
  abstract     = {We give a short overview on a recently developed notion of Ricci curvature for discrete spaces. This notion relies on geodesic convexity properties of the relative entropy along geodesics in the space of probability densities, for a metric which is similar to (but different from) the 2-Wasserstein metric. The theory can be considered as a discrete counterpart to the theory of Ricci curvature for geodesic measure spaces developed by Lott–Sturm–Villani.},
  author       = {Maas, Jan},
  booktitle    = {Modern Approaches to Discrete Curvature},
  editor       = {Najman, Laurent and Romon, Pascal},
  isbn         = {9783319580012},
  issn         = {9783319580029},
  pages        = {159 -- 174},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Entropic Ricci curvature for discrete spaces}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-319-58002-9_5},
  volume       = {2184},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{1194,
  abstract     = {Termination is one of the basic liveness properties, and we study the termination problem for probabilistic programs with real-valued variables. Previous works focused on the qualitative problem that asks whether an input program terminates with probability~1 (almost-sure termination). A powerful approach for this qualitative problem is the notion of ranking supermartingales with respect to a given set of invariants. The quantitative problem (probabilistic termination) asks for bounds on the termination probability. A fundamental and conceptual drawback of the existing approaches to address probabilistic termination is that even though the supermartingales consider the probabilistic behavior of the programs, the invariants are obtained completely ignoring the probabilistic aspect. In this work we address the probabilistic termination problem for linear-arithmetic probabilistic programs with nondeterminism. We define the notion of {\em stochastic invariants}, which are constraints along with a probability bound that the constraints hold. We introduce a concept of {\em repulsing supermartingales}. First, we show that repulsing supermartingales can be used to obtain bounds on the probability of the stochastic invariants. Second, we show the effectiveness of repulsing supermartingales in the following three ways: (1)~With a combination of ranking and repulsing supermartingales we can compute lower bounds on the probability of termination; (2)~repulsing supermartingales provide witnesses for refutation of almost-sure termination; and (3)~with a combination of ranking and repulsing supermartingales we can establish persistence properties of probabilistic programs. We also present results on related computational problems and an experimental evaluation of our approach on academic examples. },
  author       = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Novotny, Petr and Zikelic, Djordje},
  issn         = {0730-8566},
  location     = {Paris, France},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {145 -- 160},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{Stochastic invariants for probabilistic termination}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3009837.3009873},
  volume       = {52},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1029,
  abstract     = {RNA Polymerase II pauses and backtracks during transcription, with many consequences for gene expression and cellular physiology. Here, we show that the energy required to melt double-stranded nucleic acids in the transcription bubble predicts pausing in Saccharomyces cerevisiae far more accurately than nucleosome roadblocks do. In addition, the same energy difference also determines when the RNA polymerase backtracks instead of continuing to move forward. This data-driven model corroborates—in a genome wide and quantitative manner—previous evidence that sequence-dependent thermodynamic features of nucleic acids influence both transcriptional pausing and backtracking.},
  author       = {Lukacisin, Martin and Landon, Matthieu and Jajoo, Rishi},
  issn         = {1932-6203},
  journal      = {PLoS One},
  number       = {3},
  publisher    = {Public Library of Science},
  title        = {{Sequence-specific thermodynamic properties of nucleic acids influence both transcriptional pausing and backtracking in yeast}},
  doi          = {10.1371/journal.pone.0174066},
  volume       = {12},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{679,
  abstract     = {Protective responses against pathogens require a rapid mobilization of resting neutrophils and the timely removal of activated ones. Neutrophils are exceptionally short-lived leukocytes, yet it remains unclear whether the lifespan of pathogen-engaged neutrophils is regulated differently from that in the circulating steady-state pool. Here, we have found that under homeostatic conditions, the mRNA-destabilizing protein tristetraprolin (TTP) regulates apoptosis and the numbers of activated infiltrating murine neutrophils but not neutrophil cellularity. Activated TTP-deficient neutrophils exhibited decreased apoptosis and enhanced accumulation at the infection site. In the context of myeloid-specific deletion of Ttp, the potentiation of neutrophil deployment protected mice against lethal soft tissue infection with Streptococcus pyogenes and prevented bacterial dissemination. Neutrophil transcriptome analysis revealed that decreased apoptosis of TTP-deficient neutrophils was specifically associated with elevated expression of myeloid cell leukemia 1 (Mcl1) but not other antiapoptotic B cell leukemia/ lymphoma 2 (Bcl2) family members. Higher Mcl1 expression resulted from stabilization of Mcl1 mRNA in the absence of TTP. The low apoptosis rate of infiltrating TTP-deficient neutrophils was comparable to that of transgenic Mcl1-overexpressing neutrophils. Our study demonstrates that posttranscriptional gene regulation by TTP schedules the termination of the antimicrobial engagement of neutrophils. The balancing role of TTP comes at the cost of an increased risk of bacterial infections.},
  author       = {Ebner, Florian and Sedlyarov, Vitaly and Tasciyan, Saren and Ivin, Masa and Kratochvill, Franz and Gratz, Nina and Kenner, Lukas and Villunger, Andreas and Sixt, Michael K and Kovarik, Pavel},
  issn         = {0021-9738},
  journal      = {The Journal of Clinical Investigation},
  number       = {6},
  pages        = {2051 -- 2065},
  publisher    = {American Society for Clinical Investigation},
  title        = {{The RNA-binding protein tristetraprolin schedules apoptosis of pathogen-engaged neutrophils during bacterial infection}},
  doi          = {10.1172/JCI80631},
  volume       = {127},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{637,
  abstract     = {For many cryptographic primitives, it is relatively easy to achieve selective security (where the adversary commits a-priori to some of the choices to be made later in the attack) but appears difficult to achieve the more natural notion of adaptive security (where the adversary can make all choices on the go as the attack progresses). A series of several recent works shows how to cleverly achieve adaptive security in several such scenarios including generalized selective decryption (Panjwani, TCC ’07 and Fuchsbauer et al., CRYPTO ’15), constrained PRFs (Fuchsbauer et al., ASIACRYPT ’14), and Yao garbled circuits (Jafargholi and Wichs, TCC ’16b). Although the above works expressed vague intuition that they share a common technique, the connection was never made precise. In this work we present a new framework that connects all of these works and allows us to present them in a unified and simplified fashion. Moreover, we use the framework to derive a new result for adaptively secure secret sharing over access structures defined via monotone circuits. We envision that further applications will follow in the future. Underlying our framework is the following simple idea. It is well known that selective security, where the adversary commits to n-bits of information about his future choices, automatically implies adaptive security at the cost of amplifying the adversary’s advantage by a factor of up to 2n. However, in some cases the proof of selective security proceeds via a sequence of hybrids, where each pair of adjacent hybrids locally only requires some smaller partial information consisting of m ≪ n bits. The partial information needed might be completely different between different pairs of hybrids, and if we look across all the hybrids we might rely on the entire n-bit commitment. Nevertheless, the above is sufficient to prove adaptive security, at the cost of amplifying the adversary’s advantage by a factor of only 2m ≪ 2n. In all of our examples using the above framework, the different hybrids are captured by some sort of a graph pebbling game and the amount of information that the adversary needs to commit to in each pair of hybrids is bounded by the maximum number of pebbles in play at any point in time. Therefore, coming up with better strategies for proving adaptive security translates to various pebbling strategies for different types of graphs.},
  author       = {Jafargholi, Zahra and Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan and Klein, Karen and Komargodski, Ilan and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z and Wichs, Daniel},
  editor       = {Katz, Jonathan and Shacham, Hovav},
  isbn         = {978-331963687-0},
  location     = {Santa Barbara, CA, United States},
  pages        = {133 -- 163},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Be adaptive avoid overcommitting}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-319-63688-7_5},
  volume       = {10401},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{960,
  abstract     = {The human cerebral cortex is the seat of our cognitive abilities and composed of an extraordinary number of neurons, organized in six distinct layers. The establishment of specific morphological and physiological features in individual neurons needs to be regulated with high precision. Impairments in the sequential developmental programs instructing corticogenesis lead to alterations in the cortical cytoarchitecture which is thought to represent the major underlying cause for several neurological disorders including neurodevelopmental and psychiatric diseases. In this review we discuss the role of cell polarity at sequential stages during cortex development. We first provide an overview of morphological cell polarity features in cortical neural stem cells and newly-born postmitotic neurons. We then synthesize a conceptual molecular and biochemical framework how cell polarity is established at the cellular level through a break in symmetry in nascent cortical projection neurons. Lastly we provide a perspective how the molecular mechanisms applying to single cells could be probed and integrated in an in vivo and tissue-wide context.},
  author       = {Hansen, Andi H and Düllberg, Christian F and Mieck, Christine and Loose, Martin and Hippenmeyer, Simon},
  issn         = {1662-5102},
  journal      = {Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience},
  publisher    = {Frontiers Research Foundation},
  title        = {{Cell polarity in cerebral cortex development - cellular architecture shaped by biochemical networks}},
  doi          = {10.3389/fncel.2017.00176},
  volume       = {11},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{949,
  abstract     = {The notion of treewidth of graphs has been exploited for faster algorithms for several problems arising in verification and program analysis. Moreover, various notions of balanced tree decompositions have been used for improved algorithms supporting dynamic updates and analysis of concurrent programs. In this work, we present a tool for constructing tree-decompositions of CFGs obtained from Java methods, which is implemented as an extension to the widely used Soot framework. The experimental results show that our implementation on real-world Java benchmarks is very efficient. Our tool also provides the first implementation for balancing tree-decompositions. In summary, we present the first tool support for exploiting treewidth in the static analysis problems on Java programs.},
  author       = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Goharshady, Amir and Pavlogiannis, Andreas},
  editor       = {D'Souza, Deepak},
  issn         = {03029743},
  location     = {Pune, India},
  pages        = {59 -- 66},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{JTDec: A tool for tree decompositions in soot}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-319-68167-2_4},
  volume       = {10482},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{639,
  abstract     = {We study the problem of developing efficient approaches for proving worst-case bounds of non-deterministic recursive programs. Ranking functions are sound and complete for proving termination and worst-case bounds of non-recursive programs. First, we apply ranking functions to recursion, resulting in measure functions, and show that they provide a sound and complete approach to prove worst-case bounds of non-deterministic recursive programs. Our second contribution is the synthesis of measure functions in non-polynomial forms. We show that non-polynomial measure functions with logarithm and exponentiation can be synthesized through abstraction of logarithmic or exponentiation terms, Farkas’ Lemma, and Handelman’s Theorem using linear programming. While previous methods obtain worst-case polynomial bounds, our approach can synthesize bounds of the form O(n log n) as well as O(nr) where r is not an integer. We present experimental results to demonstrate that our approach can efficiently obtain worst-case bounds of classical recursive algorithms such as Merge-Sort, Closest-Pair, Karatsuba’s algorithm and Strassen’s algorithm.},
  author       = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Fu, Hongfei and Goharshady, Amir},
  editor       = {Majumdar, Rupak and Kunčak, Viktor},
  isbn         = {978-331963389-3},
  location     = {Heidelberg, Germany},
  pages        = {41 -- 63},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Non-polynomial worst case analysis of recursive programs}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-319-63390-9_3},
  volume       = {10427},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{1001,
  abstract     = {We present a computational approach for designing CurveUps, curvy shells that form from an initially flat state. They consist of small rigid tiles that are tightly held together by two pre-stretched elastic sheets attached to them. Our method allows the realization of smooth, doubly curved surfaces that can be fabricated as a flat piece. Once released, the restoring forces of the pre-stretched sheets support the object to take shape in 3D. CurveUps are structurally stable in their target configuration. The design process starts with a target surface. Our method generates a tile layout in 2D and optimizes the distribution, shape, and attachment areas of the tiles to obtain a configuration that is fabricable and in which the curved up state closely matches the target. Our approach is based on an efficient approximate model and a local optimization strategy for an otherwise intractable nonlinear optimization problem. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach for a wide range of shapes, all realized as physical prototypes.},
  author       = {Guseinov, Ruslan and Miguel, Eder and Bickel, Bernd},
  location     = {Los Angeles, CA, United States},
  number       = {4},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{CurveUps: Shaping objects from flat plates with tension-actuated curvature}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3072959.3073709},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{1120,
  abstract     = {The existence of a self-localization transition in the polaron problem has been under an active debate ever since Landau suggested it 83 years ago. Here we reveal the self-localization transition for the rotational analogue of the polaron -- the angulon quasiparticle. We show that, unlike for the polarons, self-localization of angulons occurs at finite impurity-bath coupling already at the mean-field level. The transition is accompanied by the spherical-symmetry breaking of the angulon ground state and a discontinuity in the first derivative of the ground-state energy. Moreover, the type of the symmetry breaking is dictated by the symmetry of the microscopic impurity-bath interaction, which leads to a number of distinct self-localized states. The predicted effects can potentially be addressed in experiments on cold molecules trapped in superfluid helium droplets and ultracold quantum gases, as well as on electronic excitations in solids and Bose-Einstein condensates. },
  author       = {Li, Xiang and Seiringer, Robert and Lemeshko, Mikhail},
  issn         = {2469-9926},
  journal      = {Physical Review A},
  number       = {3},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Angular self-localization of impurities rotating in a bosonic bath}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevA.95.033608},
  volume       = {95},
  year         = {2017},
}

@article{486,
  abstract     = {Color texture reproduction in 3D printing commonly ignores volumetric light transport (cross-talk) between surface points on a 3D print. Such light diffusion leads to significant blur of details and color bleeding, and is particularly severe for highly translucent resin-based print materials. Given their widely varying scattering properties, this cross-talk between surface points strongly depends on the internal structure of the volume surrounding each surface point. Existing scattering-aware methods use simplified models for light diffusion, and often accept the visual blur as an immutable property of the print medium. In contrast, our work counteracts heterogeneous scattering to obtain the impression of a crisp albedo texture on top of the 3D print, by optimizing for a fully volumetric material distribution that preserves the target appearance. Our method employs an efficient numerical optimizer on top of a general Monte-Carlo simulation of heterogeneous scattering, supported by a practical calibration procedure to obtain scattering parameters from a given set of printer materials. Despite the inherent translucency of the medium, we reproduce detailed surface textures on 3D prints. We evaluate our system using a commercial, five-tone 3D print process and compare against the printer’s native color texturing mode, demonstrating that our method preserves high-frequency features well without having to compromise on color gamut.},
  author       = {Elek, Oskar and Sumin, Denis and Zhang, Ran and Weyrich, Tim and Myszkowski, Karol and Bickel, Bernd and Wilkie, Alexander and Krivanek, Jaroslav},
  issn         = {07300301},
  journal      = {ACM Transactions on Graphics},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{Scattering-aware texture reproduction for 3D printing}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3130800.3130890},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{1002,
  abstract     = {  We present an interactive design system to create functional mechanical  objects. Our computational approach allows novice users to retarget an  existing mechanical template to a user-specified input shape. Our proposed  representation for a mechanical template encodes a parameterized mechanism,  mechanical constraints that ensure a physically valid configuration, spatial relationships of mechanical parts to the user-provided shape, and functional constraints that specify an intended functionality. We provide an intuitive interface and optimization-in-the-loop approach for finding a valid  configuration of the mechanism and the shape to ensure that higher-level  functional goals are met. Our algorithm interactively optimizes the mechanism  while the user manipulates the placement of mechanical components and the shape. Our system allows users to efficiently explore various design choices and to synthesize customized mechanical objects that can be fabricated with rapid prototyping technologies. We demonstrate the efficacy of our approach by retargeting various mechanical templates to different shapes and fabricating the resulting functional mechanical objects.
},
  author       = {Zhang, Ran and Auzinger, Thomas and Ceylan, Duygu and Li, Wilmot and Bickel, Bernd},
  issn         = {07300301},
  location     = {Los Angeles, CA, United States },
  number       = {4},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{Functionality-aware retargeting of mechanisms to 3D shapes}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3072959.3073710},
  volume       = {36},
  year         = {2017},
}

@inproceedings{911,
  abstract     = {We develop a probabilistic technique for colorizing grayscale natural images. In light of the intrinsic uncertainty of this task, the proposed probabilistic framework has numerous desirable properties. In particular, our model is able to produce multiple plausible and vivid colorizations for a given grayscale image and is one of the first colorization models to provide a proper stochastic sampling scheme. Moreover, our training procedure is supported by a rigorous theoretical framework that does not require any ad hoc heuristics and allows for efficient modeling and learning of the joint pixel color distribution.We demonstrate strong quantitative and qualitative experimental results on the CIFAR-10 dataset and the challenging ILSVRC 2012 dataset.},
  author       = {Royer, Amélie and Kolesnikov, Alexander and Lampert, Christoph},
  location     = {London, United Kingdom},
  pages        = {85.1--85.12},
  publisher    = {BMVA Press},
  title        = {{Probabilistic image colorization}},
  doi          = {10.5244/c.31.85},
  year         = {2017},
}

