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Michael Lynch

Researcher at Arizona State University

Publications -  457
Citations -  68107

Michael Lynch is an academic researcher from Arizona State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mutation rate. The author has an hindex of 112, co-authored 422 publications receiving 63461 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Lynch include University of Toronto & University of Rochester.

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Book

Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits

Michael Lynch, +1 more
TL;DR: This book discusses the genetic Basis of Quantitative Variation, Properties of Distributions, Covariance, Regression, and Correlation, and Properties of Single Loci, and Sources of Genetic Variation for Multilocus Traits.
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The evolutionary fate and consequences of duplicate genes

TL;DR: Although duplicate genes may only rarely evolve new functions, the stochastic silencing of such genes may play a significant role in the passive origin of new species.
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Preservation of Duplicate Genes by Complementary, Degenerative Mutations

TL;DR: Focusing on the regulatory complexity of eukaryotic genes, it is shown how complementary degenerative mutations in different regulatory elements of duplicated genes can facilitate the preservation of both duplicates, thereby increasing long-term opportunities for the evolution of new gene functions.
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Analysis of population genetic structure with RAPD markers

TL;DR: Estimators for several population‐genetic parameters (gene and genotype frequencies, within‐ and between‐population heterozygosities, degree of inbreeding and population subdivision, and degree of individual relatedness) are presented along with expressions for their sampling variances.
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The origins of genome complexity.

TL;DR: It is argued that many of these modifications emerged passively in response to the long-term population-size reductions that accompanied increases in organism size, and provided novel substrates for the secondary evolution of phenotypic complexity by natural selection.