Maximization Principles in Models of Frequency - Dependent Selection
Autor Kristan Schneideren Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 oct 2011
Population genetics is a branch of genetics concerned with the study of the genetic composition of natural populations. Genetic factors such as segregation, recombination, mutation, or mating structure as well as environmental or behavioral factors change the genetic composition of a population. By incorporating the fundamental rules of the underlying genetic structure and the environmental factors, population genetics seeks to clarify the mechanisms of evolution. Population genetics is tightly linked to both the theory of natural selection and the mechanisms of inheritance, which by most scientists were erroneously believed to be incompatible until the second decade of the twentieth century. We will draw our attention to models of frequency-dependent selection, a form of selection that occurs if the fi tness ('probability that an offspring survives until the age of reproduction') of a particular phenotype depends on the frequency of its own and other phenotypes in the population. In four chapters we encounter several aspects of models of frequencydependent selection, which subsume various biological situations. Especially, we will focus on establishing general principles that allow us to recognize evolution as a process of 'optimization'.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 3854931840
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 215 x 251 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Holzhausen Verlag GmbH
Cuprins
-> Preface, Acknowledgements, Introduction -> 1 Optimization under Frequency-Dependent Selection: 1.1. Introduction 1.2 Wildcard Model and Particular Cases 1.2.1 The Wildcard Model 1.2.2 Particular Cases 1.2.2.1 Randompairwise contests 1.2.2.2 Intraspecific Competition. The Bürger-Schneider model 1.3 Optimization by frequency-dependent selection 1.3.1 The Wild card Model 1.3.2 Lyapunov Functions Previously Found in the Particular Cases 1.3.2.1 The Lessard Model 1.3.2.2 The Bürger-Schneider model 1.3.3 An ancestor of the Lyapunov function of the Wildcard Model 1.3.3.1 The Matessi-Jayakar model 1.3.3.2 The Christiansen-Loeschcke model 1.4 Multiple Loci 1.4.1 The Multilocus Multiallele Framework 1.4.2 The Density-Independent Model 1.4.3 The Density-Dependent Model 1.5 Discussion -> 2 Max. principles I: the one-locus two-allele case: 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Preliminaries 2.3 The Pairwise-Interaction Model 2.3.1 The Symmetric Case 2.3.2 The Asymmetric Case 2.4 The PIMin continuous time 2.5 Discussion, Appendix -> 3 Max. principles II: the one-locus multiallele case: 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Preliminaries 3.3 The PIMin discrete time 3.3.1 The Pseudo-Symmetric Case 3.3.2 The Asymmetric Case 3.4 The D-PIMin continuous time 3.4.1 The pseudo-symmetric case 3.4.2 The asymmetric case 3.5 Discussion, AppendixA, AppendixB -> 4 Long-term evolution: 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Model description 4.3 Assumptions and Preliminaries 4.4 Main Results 4.5 Numerical examples 4.6 Multiple LTEs 4.7 Discussion, Appendix A, Appendix B, Bibliography -> Bibliography