Analysis of Evolutionary Processes: The Adaptive Dynamics Approach and Its ApplicationsPrinceton University Press, 2008. 2. 11. - 360페이지 Quantitative approaches to evolutionary biology traditionally consider evolutionary change in isolation from an important pressure in natural selection: the demography of coevolving populations. In Analysis of Evolutionary Processes, Fabio Dercole and Sergio Rinaldi have written the first comprehensive book on Adaptive Dynamics (AD), a quantitative modeling approach that explicitly links evolutionary changes to demographic ones. The book shows how the so-called AD canonical equation can answer questions of paramount interest in biology, engineering, and the social sciences, especially economics. |
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... associated with greater survival and reproductive success, whose frequencies in the populations increase over time; – the cumulative effects of mutations and natural selection, over a long period of time, alter the characteristics of ...
... associated with large mutations. For example, the first personal computer was huge and expensive like a big mainframe, and the first mobile phone was a heavy car phone, different from a traditional phone only for the presence of an ...
... associated fitness is, respectively, larger than one or positive. As we will see in the next chapter, the quantitative approaches for modeling evolutionary dynamics make an extensive use of the concept of fitness, and adopt the first or ...
... can do, to keep in the same place.” The term the “Red Queen” is also associated in the biological literature with the evolution of sex, since chromosome recombination maintains genetic variability 16 CHAPTER 1 1.6 The Red Queen Hypothesis.
... is now well documented and associated with the impact of an asteroid in the Yucatan peninsula (Alvarez et al., 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 21 INTRODUCTION TO EVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES 1.8 Evolutionary Extinction.
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1 | |
Chapter 2 Modeling Approaches | 43 |
Chapter 3 The Canonical Equation of Adaptive Dynamics | 74 |
Chapter 4 Evolutionary Branching and the Origin of Diversity | 119 |
Chapter 5 Multiple Attractors and Cyclic Evolutionary Regimes | 138 |
Chapter 6 Catastrophes of Evolutionary Regimes | 153 |
Chapter 7 BranchingExtinction Evolutionary Cycles | 172 |
Chapter 8 Demographic Bistability and Evolutionary Reversals | 186 |
Chapter 10 The First Example of Evolutionary Chaos | 231 |
Appendix A Secondorder Dynamical Systems and Their Bifurcations | 243 |
Appendix B The Invasion Implies Substitution Theorem | 272 |
Appendix C The Probability of Escaping Accidental Extinction | 277 |
Appendix D The Branching Conditions | 281 |
Bibliography | 287 |
Index | 325 |
Chapter 9 SlowFast Populations Dynamics and Evolutionary Ridges | 204 |