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Introduction to Evolutionary Medicine 2015
Introduction to Evolutionary Medicine 2015

... • B. Understanding evolution can improve preventative or treatment plans. • C. Evolution provides a framework for understanding physiology and pathology ...
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Behavioral Objectives:
Behavioral Objectives:

...  Why doesn’t natural selection result in “perfect” organisms?  Why aren’t acquired traits passed on? o Malthus and Lyell o Observations while aboard the Beagle Explain Darwin’s theory for evolution. o What is the process called? o Explain how the process works – How does it lead to populations ada ...
Evolution Notes
Evolution Notes

... published the Origin of Species. In this book, he outlined the principles of natural selection. ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... Natural Selection In the evolutionary struggle for existence, entire organisms, not individual genes, either survive and reproduce or do not. Natural selection can operate only on the phenotypic variation among individuals. An organism's phenotype includes all the physical and behavioral characteris ...
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Evolution study guide

... Definition of Natural Selection- Differential reproduction Success Evidence supporting evolution: o Comparative embryology o Molecular biology o Biogeography-distribution of living species o Comparative anatomy: o Define: Homologous structure: wing of bat, whale flipper Vestigial structures-appendix ...
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Evolution

...  Notes Natural Selection  Natural Selection Examples: peppered moth, multi-drug resistant TB ...
Random Selection Kelly Pankowski My artwork is deeply influenced
Random Selection Kelly Pankowski My artwork is deeply influenced

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Lecture Questions

... b. phenotypes of individuals. c. genotypes of populations. d. phenotypes of populations. ...
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Exam II Vocabulary Review

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QS039--Ch21--Mechanisms of Evolution
QS039--Ch21--Mechanisms of Evolution

... a. ____________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ b. ____________________________________________________________________ ____________ ...
< 1 ... 34 35 36 37 38

Evolutionary landscape

An evolutionary landscape is a metaphor; a construct used to think about and visualize the processes of evolution (e.g. natural selection and genetic drift) acting on a biological entity ( e.g., a gene, protein, population, species). This entity can be viewed as searching or moving through a search space. For example, the search space of a gene would be all possible nucleotide sequences. The search space is only part of an evolutionary landscape. The final component is the ""y-axis,"" which is usually fitness. Each value along the search space can result in a high or low fitness for the entity. If small movements through search space causes small changes in fitness are relatively small, then the landscape is considered smooth. Smooth landscapes happen when most fixed mutations have little to no effect on fitness, which is what one would expect with the neutral theory of molecular evolution. In contrast, if small movements result in large changes in fitness, then the landscape is said to be rugged. In either case, movement tends to be toward areas of higher fitness, though usually not the global optima.What exactly constitutes an ""evolutionary landscape"" is confused in the literature. The term evolutionary landscape is often used interchangeably with adaptive landscape and fitness landscape, though other authors distinguish between them. As discussed below, different authors have different definitions of adaptive and fitness landscapes. Additionally, there is large disagreement whether it should be used as a visual metaphor disconnected from the underlying math, a tool for evaluating models of evolution, or a model in and of itself used to generate hypotheses and predictions. Clearly, the field of biology, specifically evolutionary biology and population genetics, needs to come to a consensus of what an evolutionary landscape is and how it should be used.
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