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Natural selection. VI. Partitioning the information in fitness and characters by path analysis.

Steven A. Frank
- 01 Mar 2013 - 
- Vol. 26, Iss: 3, pp 457-471
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors interpret the fundamental equations of selection and evolution as sentences that express how various causes lead to the accumulation of information by selection and the decay of information in other evolutionary processes.
Abstract
Three steps aid in the analysis of selection. First, describe phenotypes by their component causes. Components include genes, maternal effects, symbionts and any other predictors of phenotype that are of interest. Second, describe fitness by its component causes, such as an individual's phenotype, its neighbours' phenotypes, resource availability and so on. Third, put the predictors of phenotype and fitness into an exact equation for evolutionary change, providing a complete expression of selection and other evolutionary processes. The complete expression separates the distinct causal roles of the various hypothesized components of phenotypes and fitness. Traditionally, those components are given by the covariance, variance and regression terms of evolutionary models. I show how to interpret those statistical expressions with respect to information theory. The resulting interpretation allows one to read the fundamental equations of selection and evolution as sentences that express how various causes lead to the accumulation of information by selection and the decay of information by other evolutionary processes. The interpretation in terms of information leads to a deeper understanding of selection and heritability, and a clearer sense of how to formulate causal hypotheses about evolutionary process. Kin selection appears as a particular type of causal analysis that partitions social effects into meaningful components.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Natural selection. VII. History and interpretation of kin selection theory.

TL;DR: Kin selection theory is a kind of causal analysis as mentioned in this paper, and it is always possible to separate total effects into different component causes, reflecting the distinct goals, interests and biases of different perspectives, for example, group selection is a particular causal scheme with certain advantages and significant limitations.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Can We Study the Evolution of Animal Minds

TL;DR: The overall goal in this review is to build a bridge between cognitive neuroscientists and evolutionary biologists, illustrate how their research could be complementary, and encourage evolutionary ecologists to include explicit attention to cognitive processes in their studies of behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can natural selection favour altruism between species

TL;DR: A spatial population genetic model of two interacting species is developed, showing that indiscriminate between species helping can be favoured by natural selection, and supports Darwin's suggestion that natural selection does not favour traits that provide benefits exclusively to individuals of other species.
Journal ArticleDOI

How to quantify (the response to) sexual selection on traits

TL;DR: The model controls for confounding variables, such as body size or condition, when estimating the relationship between mating and reproductive success, and defines the Bateman gradient and the Jones index using partial rather than simple regressions, leading to better estimates of the strength of sexual selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Price Equation Program: Simple Invariances Unify Population Dynamics, Thermodynamics, Probability, Information and Inference.

TL;DR: The fundamental equations of various disciplines often seem to share the same basic structure. as discussed by the authors suggests that the Price equation expresses that underlying universal structure. But it does not explain the common structural forms of the equations in different disciplines.
References
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Book

The Selfish Gene

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take up the concepts of altruistic and selfish behaviour; the genetical definition of selfish interest; the evolution of aggressive behaviour; kinship theory; sex ratio theory; reciprocal altruism; deceit; and the natural selection of sex differences.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of selection on correlated characters

TL;DR: Measures of directional and stabilizing selection on each of a set of phenotypically correlated characters are derived, retrospective, based on observed changes in the multivariate distribution of characters within a generation, not on the evolutionary response to selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Culture and the evolutionary process

Robert Boyd, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1986 - 
TL;DR: Using methods developed by population biologists, a theory of cultural evolution is proposed that is an original and fair-minded alternative to the sociobiology debate.