Search results for "Biological Evolution"

showing 10 items of 522 documents

The meaning of biological signals.

2020

We introduce the virtual special issue on content in signalling systems. The issue explores the uses and limits of ideas from evolutionary game theory and information theory for explaining the content of biological signals. We explain the basic idea of the Lewis-Skyrms sender-receiver framework, and we highlight three key themes of the issue: (i) the challenge of accounting for deception, misinformation and false content, (ii) the relevance of partial or total common interest to the evolution of meaningful signals, and (iii) how the sender-receiver framework relates to teleosemantics.

Cognitive scienceHistoryDeceptionComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectCommunicationEvolutionary game theoryQ Science (General)B Philosophy (General)General MedicineDeceptionInformation theoryBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalAnimal CommunicationMeaning (philosophy of language)History and Philosophy of ScienceGame TheoryKey (cryptography)AnimalsHumansRelevance (information retrieval)MisinformationGame theorymedia_commonStudies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences
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Putting information back into biological communication.

2010

At the heart of many debates on communication is the concept of information. There is an intuitive sense in which communication implies the transfer of some kind of information, probably the reason why information is an essential ingredient in most definitions of communication. However, information has also been an endless source of misunderstandings, and recent accounts have proposed that information should be dropped from a formal definition of communication. In this article, we re-evaluate the merits and the internal logic of information-based vs. information-free approaches and conclude that information-free approaches are conceptually incomplete and operationally hindered. Instead, we …

Cognitive scienceScope (project management)Redundancy (linguistics)BiologyBiological EvolutionReferential communicationAnimal CommunicationInformative contentTerminology as TopicAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternal logicFormal descriptionDiversity (business)Journal of evolutionary biology
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Evolution of reduced prokaryotic genomes and the minimal cell concept: Variations on a theme

2010

Prokaryotic genomes of endosymbionts and parasites are examples of naturally evolved minimal cells, the study of which can shed light on life in its minimum form. Their diverse biology, their lack of a large set of orthologous genes and the existence of essential linage (and environmentally) specific genes all illustrate the diversity of genes building up naturally evolved minimal cells. This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that sometimes the same essential function is performed by genes from different evolutionary origins. Nevertheless, all cells perform a set of life-essential functions however different their cell machinery and environment in which they thrive. An upcoming challenge…

Comparative genomicsGeneticsBase Composition0303 health sciencesGenomeEndosymbiosis030306 microbiologyCellsCellGenomicsBiologyBiological EvolutionGenomeGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesmedicine.anatomical_structureProkaryotic CellsEvolutionary biologymedicineMinimal genomeSymbiosisGeneFunction (biology)030304 developmental biologyBioEssays
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Bacterial endosymbionts of insects: insights from comparative genomics.

2004

The development of molecular techniques for the study of uncultured bacteria allowed the extensive study of the widespread association between insects and intracellular symbiotic bacteria. Most of the bacterial endosymbionts involved in such associations are gamma-proteobacteria, closely related to Escherichia coli. In recent years, five genomes from insect endosymbionts have been sequenced, allowing the performance of extensive genome comparative analysis that, as a complement of phylogenetic studies, and analysis on individual genes, can help to understand the different traits of this particular association, including how the symbiotic process is established, the explanation of the specia…

Comparative genomicsInsectaBacteriaEcologyfungiAdaptation BiologicalBacterial Physiological PhenomenaBiologymedicine.disease_causeBacterial Physiological PhenomenaMicrobiologyGenomeBiological EvolutionSymbiosisEvolutionary biologymedicinebacteriaAnimalsAdaptationSymbiosisEscherichia coliGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGenome BacterialSymbiotic bacteriaEnvironmental microbiology
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Mate choice for indirect genetic benefits: scrutiny of the current paradigm

2007

Summary 1Sexual selection through mate choice, and in particular female choice for indirect fitness benefits for their offspring, is a major paradigm that currently seems to enjoy almost unequivocal acceptance. A large body of theoretical work has been built to explain the evolution of mate choice in the absence of direct benefits, and the empiricists have enthusiastically verified the various assumptions and predictions of the theory. 2However, the relative importance of mate choice for indirect benefits in comparison to choice for direct benefits or to other mechanisms of sexual selection such as male–male competition or sensory exploitation remains a controversial issue, and this seems t…

Competition (economics)Empirical researchScrutinyMate choiceEcologySexual selectionBiological evolutionMatingBiologyPositive economicsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Functional Ecology
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Pulsed-Resource Dynamics Constrain the Evolution of Predator-Prey Interactions

2011

Although temporal variability in the physical environment plays a major role in population fluctuations, little is known about how it drives the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of species interactions. We studied experimentally how extrinsic resource pulses affect evolutionary and ecological dynamics between the prey bacterium Serratia marcescens and the predatory protozoan Tetrahymena thermophila. Predation increased the frequency of defensive, nonpigmented prey types, which bore competitive costs in terms of reduced maximum growth rate, most in a constant-resource environment. Furthermore, the predator densities of the pulsed-resource environment regularly fluctuated above and below …

Competitive BehaviorFood ChainTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulation DynamicsPopulationAdaptation BiologicalEnvironmentBiologyTrade-offCompetition (biology)Tetrahymena thermophilaPredationAbundance (ecology)AnimalsSelection GeneticEvolutionary dynamicseducationPredatorEcosystemSerratia marcescensEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonPopulation Densityeducation.field_of_studyEcologyProdigiosinBiological EvolutionPhenotypeBiofilmsPredatory BehaviorbacteriaPrey switchingThe American Naturalist
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An Analysis of the Influence of Noneffective Instructions in Linear Genetic Programming

2020

Abstract Linear Genetic Programming (LGP) represents programs as sequences of instructions and has a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) dataflow. The results of instructions are stored in registers that can be used as arguments by other instructions. Instructions that are disconnected from the main part of the program are called noneffective instructions, or structural introns. They also appear in other DAG-based GP approaches like Cartesian Genetic Programming (CGP). This article studies four hypotheses on the role of structural introns: noneffective instructions (1) serve as evolutionary memory, where evolved information is stored and later used in search, (2) preserve population diversity, (3)…

Computational MathematicsTheoretical computer scienceDataflowComputer scienceLinear genetic programmingPopulation diversitySymbolic regressionCartesian genetic programmingDirected acyclic graphBiological EvolutionAlgorithmsNeutral mutationEvolutionary Computation
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1993

This hotly debated question remains topical. Is biological evolution subjected to a strict determinism, to laws facilitating prediction, or is it at least in part subject to chance, and thereby unpredictable? We shall now consider this problem.

Computer scienceSubject (philosophy)Biological evolutionDeterminismEpistemology
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Comparative morphology of the postpharyngeal gland in the Philanthinae (Hymenoptera, Crabronidae) and the evolution of an antimicrobial brood protect…

2015

Background Hymenoptera that mass-provision their offspring have evolved elaborate antimicrobial strategies to ward off fungal infestation of the highly nutritive larval food. Females of the Afro-European Philanthus triangulum and the South American Trachypus elongatus (Crabronidae, Philanthinae) embalm their prey, paralyzed bees, with a secretion from a complex postpharyngeal gland (PPG). This coating consists of mainly unsaturated hydrocarbons and reduces water accumulation on the prey’s surface, thus rendering it unfavorable for fungal growth. Here we (1) investigated whether a North American Philanthus species also employs prey embalming and (2) assessed the occurrence and morphology of …

CrabronidaeWaspsMolecular ConformationBeewolvesBeesAntifungalBiological Evolution590 Tiere (Zoologie)HydrocarbonsPrey preservationExocrine GlandsLarvaPredatory BehaviorPhilanthinaeddc:590AnimalsPostpharyngeal glandComparative morphologyAntimicrobialFemale3D reconstructionPostpharyngeal gland; 3D reconstruction; Comparative morphology; Prey preservation; Antimicrobial; Antifungal; Crabronidae; Philanthinae; BeewolvesPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
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Study of the Evolutionary Relationships among Limonium Species (Plumbaginaceae) Using Nuclear and Cytoplasmic Molecular Markers

2000

The genus Limonium, due to the patchiness of the natural habitats of its species as well as the high frequency of hybridization and polyploidy and the possibility of reproduction by apomixis, provides an example of all the principal mechanisms of rapid speciation of plants. As an initial study of evolution in this genus, we have analyzed intra- and interspecific variability in 17 species from section Limonium, the largest in the genus, based on RFLPs of cpDNA and nuclear rDNA ITS sequences. In the cpDNA analysis, 21 restriction enzymes were used, resulting in 779 fragments, 490 of which were variable and 339 parsimony informative. L. furfuraceum exhibited two relatively divergent cpDNA hapl…

CytoplasmChloroplastsLimoniumMolecular Sequence DataBiologyDNA RibosomalPhylogeneticsSequence Homology Nucleic AcidApomixisPolyphylyBotanyGeneticsMolecular BiologyPhylogenyPlant Physiological PhenomenaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCell NucleusBase SequencePhylogenetic treeMediterranean RegionReproductionGenetic VariationPlantsbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionReticulate evolutionChloroplast DNARestriction fragment length polymorphismPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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