In a commentary in Frontiers, Van Rooijen (2014) states: “Today the developments in genetics are exciting. Perhaps this explains why geneticists sometimes seem to overlook common sense solutions. One example of this is the selection experiment done by Bijma et al. (2007a,b). ……As a result their selection seemed not very efficient.” In those two papers, however, we do not report a selection experiment. The first paper presents general quantitative genetic theory, showing how interactions among individuals alter heritable variation in traits, and how this can affect response to selection. The second paper presents general methodology to estimate the quantitative genetic parameters for such traits, and illustrates this methodology using a popu...
In this commentary, I make inferences about the level of repeatability and constraint in the evoluti...
Survival of commercial laying hens is an important trait. Feather pecking has a large effect on the ...
With social interactions, individuals may affect each other’s phenotype. In these cases, an individu...
In a commentary in Frontiers, Van Rooijen (2014) states: “Today the developments in genetics are exc...
Response to commentary on “Examples of overlooking common sense solutions: the domestication gene an
International audienceAlthough there are many examples of contemporary directional selection, eviden...
Whilst there are many examples of contemporary directional selection, evidence for responses to sele...
Why is Gärtner's paper so interesting? It is for a number of reasons, but the most interesting is no...
Science is about causes, period. For too many years, mainstream behavioural genetics was based on a ...
doi:10.1111/j.1469-1795.2007.00134.x Inbreeding depression is a phenomenon largely taken for granted...
<p>Background: Mortality due to cannibalism causes both economic and welfare problems in laying hens...
Interactions among individuals are universal, both in animals and in plants and in natural as well a...
Through social interactions, individuals affect one another’s phenotype. The heritable effect of an ...
Conventional wisdom is that selection decreases genetic variation in populations, variation that is ...
The ability to predict individual breeding values in natural populations with known pedigrees has pr...
In this commentary, I make inferences about the level of repeatability and constraint in the evoluti...
Survival of commercial laying hens is an important trait. Feather pecking has a large effect on the ...
With social interactions, individuals may affect each other’s phenotype. In these cases, an individu...
In a commentary in Frontiers, Van Rooijen (2014) states: “Today the developments in genetics are exc...
Response to commentary on “Examples of overlooking common sense solutions: the domestication gene an
International audienceAlthough there are many examples of contemporary directional selection, eviden...
Whilst there are many examples of contemporary directional selection, evidence for responses to sele...
Why is Gärtner's paper so interesting? It is for a number of reasons, but the most interesting is no...
Science is about causes, period. For too many years, mainstream behavioural genetics was based on a ...
doi:10.1111/j.1469-1795.2007.00134.x Inbreeding depression is a phenomenon largely taken for granted...
<p>Background: Mortality due to cannibalism causes both economic and welfare problems in laying hens...
Interactions among individuals are universal, both in animals and in plants and in natural as well a...
Through social interactions, individuals affect one another’s phenotype. The heritable effect of an ...
Conventional wisdom is that selection decreases genetic variation in populations, variation that is ...
The ability to predict individual breeding values in natural populations with known pedigrees has pr...
In this commentary, I make inferences about the level of repeatability and constraint in the evoluti...
Survival of commercial laying hens is an important trait. Feather pecking has a large effect on the ...
With social interactions, individuals may affect each other’s phenotype. In these cases, an individu...