Landscapes play an important role in many areas of biology, in which biological lives are deeply entangled. Here we discuss a form of landscape in evolutionary biology which takes into account (1) initial growth rates, (2) mutation rates, (3) resource consumption by organisms, and (4) cyclic changes in the resources with time. The long-term equilibrium number of surviving organisms as a function of these four parameters forms what we call a success landscape, a landscape we would claim is qualitatively different from fitness landscapes which commonly do not include mutations or resource consumption/changes in mapping genomes to the final number of survivors. Although our analysis is purely theoretical, we believe the results have possibly s...
Cells adapt to changing environments. Perturb a cell and it returns to a point of homeostasis. Pertu...
A simplistic view of the adaptive process pictures a hillside along which a population can climb: wh...
Fitness landscape is a concept, which describes the dependence of phenotype on genotype. It was pro...
Landscapes play an important role in many areas of biology, in which biological lives are deeply ent...
A combinatorially complete data set consists of studies of all possible combinations of a set of mut...
this paper will demonstrate, Fitness Landscapes suggest that focused intervention efforts will be mo...
∗ Address for correspondence Abstract. The concept of a fitness landscape arose in theoretical biolo...
The concept of a fitness landscape arose in theoretical biology, while that of effective fitness has...
The adaptive landscape is one of the most widely used metaphors in evolutionary biology. It is creat...
Genotypes, phenotypes, and fitness are the ultimate determinants of evolution. The relationship betw...
When cancers or bacterial infections establish, small populations of cells have to free themselves f...
Epistasis occurs when the effect of a mutation depends on its carrier's genetic background. Despite ...
'Adaptive Landscape' was first formulated as a heuristic model or metaphor for the evolutionary proc...
The rate of mutation is central to evolution. Mutations are required for adaptation, yet most mutati...
The mapping from genotype to phenotype to fitness typically involves multiple nonlinearities that ca...
Cells adapt to changing environments. Perturb a cell and it returns to a point of homeostasis. Pertu...
A simplistic view of the adaptive process pictures a hillside along which a population can climb: wh...
Fitness landscape is a concept, which describes the dependence of phenotype on genotype. It was pro...
Landscapes play an important role in many areas of biology, in which biological lives are deeply ent...
A combinatorially complete data set consists of studies of all possible combinations of a set of mut...
this paper will demonstrate, Fitness Landscapes suggest that focused intervention efforts will be mo...
∗ Address for correspondence Abstract. The concept of a fitness landscape arose in theoretical biolo...
The concept of a fitness landscape arose in theoretical biology, while that of effective fitness has...
The adaptive landscape is one of the most widely used metaphors in evolutionary biology. It is creat...
Genotypes, phenotypes, and fitness are the ultimate determinants of evolution. The relationship betw...
When cancers or bacterial infections establish, small populations of cells have to free themselves f...
Epistasis occurs when the effect of a mutation depends on its carrier's genetic background. Despite ...
'Adaptive Landscape' was first formulated as a heuristic model or metaphor for the evolutionary proc...
The rate of mutation is central to evolution. Mutations are required for adaptation, yet most mutati...
The mapping from genotype to phenotype to fitness typically involves multiple nonlinearities that ca...
Cells adapt to changing environments. Perturb a cell and it returns to a point of homeostasis. Pertu...
A simplistic view of the adaptive process pictures a hillside along which a population can climb: wh...
Fitness landscape is a concept, which describes the dependence of phenotype on genotype. It was pro...