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Frank Jülicher

Researcher at Max Planck Society

Publications -  405
Citations -  34181

Frank Jülicher is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Molecular motor & Entropy production. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 384 publications receiving 28421 citations. Previous affiliations of Frank Jülicher include Simon Fraser University & Dresden University of Technology.

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Extreme-Value Statistics of Stochastic Transport Processes: Applications to Molecular Motors and Sports

TL;DR: In this article, the authors derived exact expressions for the finite-time statistics of extrema (maximum and minimum) of the spatial displacement and the fluctuating entropy flow of biased random walks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

3D surface reconstruction and visualization of the Drosophila wing imaginal disc at cellular resolution

TL;DR: A data processing pipeline to generate 3D volumetric surface models of epithelial tissues, as well as geometric descriptions of the tissues’ apical cell cross-sections, and calculation and visualization of morphological parameters show position-dependent patterns of cell shape in the wing imaginal disc are presented.
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Quantification of nematic cell polarity in three-dimensional tissues.

TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual and algorithmic framework is proposed to characterize complex patterns of polarity proteins on the surface of a cell in terms of a multipole expansion, which is different from vectorial cell polarity in simple, sheetlike epithelia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Erratum: Salt-Dependent Rheology and Surface Tension of Protein Condensates Using Optical Traps [Phys. Rev. Lett. 121, 258101 (2018)].

TL;DR: This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.258101 to reflect that the paper was originally published in Physical Review Letters, not RevLett, rather than Science.
Journal ArticleDOI

Active cargo positioning in antiparallel transport networks.

TL;DR: Stochastic transport properties of colloidal beads in antiparallel networks of overlapping actin filaments are investigated using micropatterns of actin polymerization in vitro, finding that beads coated with myosin motors sensed the net polarity of the actin network, resulting in active bead positioning to regions of neutral polarity with a precision depending on the motor type.