A fundamental aim of post-genomic 21st century biology is to understand the genotype-phenotype map (GPM) or how specific genetic variation relates to specific phenotypic variation. Quantitative genetics approximates such maps using linear models, and has developed methods to predict the response to selection in a population. The other major field of research concerned with the GPM, developmental evolutionary biology or evo-devo, has found the GPM to be highly nonlinear and complex. Here we quantify how the predictions of quantitative genetics are affected by the complex, nonlinear maps found in developmental biology. We found that the disagreements between predicted and observed responses to selection are common, roughly in a third of gene...
The independent evolution of different quantitative traits is often thought to require a modular str...
A central challenge in evolutionary biology is to identify genes underlying ecologically important t...
In this chapter, we review and compare existing theoretical models of the relationship between genet...
A core focus of genetics is understanding the relationship between genetic variation (genotypes) and...
The genetic architecture of adaptation in natural populations has not yet been resolved: it is not c...
In quantitative genetics, the effects of developmental relationships among traits on microevolution ...
Quantitative genetics provides a powerful framework for studying phenotypic evolution and the evolut...
Among the most fundamental features shared by all organisms is the mapping of information encoded in...
One of the most fundamental and least understood elements of evolution is the mapping between genoty...
The G matrix is a statistical summary of the genetic basis of a set of traits and a central pillar o...
The map between genotype and phenotype is fundamental to biology. Biological information is stored a...
Understanding how genotypes map onto phenotypes, fitness, and eventually organisms is arguably the n...
The evolution of new genes is distinct from evolution through allelic sub-stitution in that new gene...
<div><p>Genotype-phenotype (GP) maps specify how the random mutations that change genotypes generate...
Genotype-phenotype (GP) maps specify how the random mutations that change genotypes generate variati...
The independent evolution of different quantitative traits is often thought to require a modular str...
A central challenge in evolutionary biology is to identify genes underlying ecologically important t...
In this chapter, we review and compare existing theoretical models of the relationship between genet...
A core focus of genetics is understanding the relationship between genetic variation (genotypes) and...
The genetic architecture of adaptation in natural populations has not yet been resolved: it is not c...
In quantitative genetics, the effects of developmental relationships among traits on microevolution ...
Quantitative genetics provides a powerful framework for studying phenotypic evolution and the evolut...
Among the most fundamental features shared by all organisms is the mapping of information encoded in...
One of the most fundamental and least understood elements of evolution is the mapping between genoty...
The G matrix is a statistical summary of the genetic basis of a set of traits and a central pillar o...
The map between genotype and phenotype is fundamental to biology. Biological information is stored a...
Understanding how genotypes map onto phenotypes, fitness, and eventually organisms is arguably the n...
The evolution of new genes is distinct from evolution through allelic sub-stitution in that new gene...
<div><p>Genotype-phenotype (GP) maps specify how the random mutations that change genotypes generate...
Genotype-phenotype (GP) maps specify how the random mutations that change genotypes generate variati...
The independent evolution of different quantitative traits is often thought to require a modular str...
A central challenge in evolutionary biology is to identify genes underlying ecologically important t...
In this chapter, we review and compare existing theoretical models of the relationship between genet...