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Ch. 17
Ch. 17

... • Nonrandom mating occurs when individuals with certain genotypes mate with one another either more or less commonly than would be expected by chance  sexual selection is choosing a mate based on, often, physical characteristics  nonrandom mating alters genotype frequencies but not allele frequenc ...
here - Intelligent Design and Evolution Awareness Center
here - Intelligent Design and Evolution Awareness Center

... difference equates to 80 million bp's. If we assume a human-chimpanzee primate generation time of 15 years, and it has been 5 million years since humans and chimps diverged, this allows for 500,000 generations of change implying an ...
The Cultural Evolution of Technology and Science
The Cultural Evolution of Technology and Science

... Darwinian “population thinking” (Richerson and Boyd 2005), in which patterns and trends at the population level are explained in terms of the underlying, individual-level mechanisms of variation, selection, and transmission. For biological (genetic) evolution, these individual-level processes are na ...
Laws of Adaptation
Laws of Adaptation

... limited resources. A biological model for the competition parameters. Short term evolution driven by density-frequency dependent selection due to competition. A functional maximized by selection of this type in the case of one gene with many alleles. ...
DLGTworksheet
DLGTworksheet

... A. Learning Objectives for the Day  Why might cultural relativism pose ethical dilemmas for the anthropologist?  How might cultural relativism be a took in the pursuit of universal human rights rather than an obstacle to it? ➤Focus on female genital operations through the excerpt from Aman: Story ...
Ch. 16: Presentation Slides
Ch. 16: Presentation Slides

slides - UBC Botany
slides - UBC Botany

... When is inbreeding beneficial? Is inbreeding depression universal? Write down 1–2 sentences. Discuss with a neighbor. Report back to class. ...
91157 Demonstrate understanding of genetic variation and
91157 Demonstrate understanding of genetic variation and

...  Explain how the interaction between ecological factors and natural selection leads to genetic changes within populations and is related to the material in the Teaching and Learning Guide for Biology, Ministry of Education, 2010 at http://seniorsecondary.tki.org.nz. This standard is also derived fr ...
Response_To_Selection_RBP
Response_To_Selection_RBP

EVOLVING STILL S STILL STI
EVOLVING STILL S STILL STI

... the past. We see the long-term winners, such as lactase persistence, but may miss the short-term dy­­ namics. Human populations are about to become the most intensively ob­­ served long-term experiment in evolutionary biology. What will the future of human evolution look like? Across the past few th ...
Evolution
Evolution

... 3. Genetic   drift   stems   from   the   chance   occurrence   that   some   individuals   have   more   offspring  than   others   and   results   in  changes   in   allele   frequencies   that   are   random   in  d irection.   4. When   ind ...
Ch 23 – Evolution of Populations
Ch 23 – Evolution of Populations

Forces of Evolution
Forces of Evolution

... parents produce just a few offspring, allele frequencies in the offspring may differ, by chance, from allele frequencies in the parents. This is like tossing a coin. If you toss a coin just a few times, you may, by chance, get more or less than the expected 50 percent heads or tails. In a small popu ...
Lecture 1: What is Anthropology - Historical Archaeology at Ball
Lecture 1: What is Anthropology - Historical Archaeology at Ball

... Industrial states, highly stratified based on occupation, global system ...
PowerPoint Presentation - What is an adaptation?
PowerPoint Presentation - What is an adaptation?

... • Selection can favor altruistic behavior when animals interact with kin because they share copies of genes that are identical by descent. • The condition for altruism to spread is given by Hamilton’s rule: rB > C – B = increase in recipient’s LRS – C = decrease in donor’s LRS ...
Genetic Algorithms: A Tutorial
Genetic Algorithms: A Tutorial

... and 3.2, NT, and almost all Microsoft applications products have shipped with pieces of code created by that system.” - Nathan Myhrvold, Microsoft Advanced Technology Group, Wired, September 1995 ...
Evolutionary forces in plant pathogen population: empirical
Evolutionary forces in plant pathogen population: empirical

... plant   and   other   variables.   As   the   main   part   of   this   interaction,   plants   have   an   innate   ability   to   recognize   the   potential   invading  pathogens   and  mount  successful   defenses.  The  pathogen   on   t ...
the whole slide set
the whole slide set

24 Does Culture Evolve?
24 Does Culture Evolve?

evolution and natural selection - CAPE Biology Unit 1 Haughton
evolution and natural selection - CAPE Biology Unit 1 Haughton

... populations are favoured for survival over others because of useful traits ...
Natural selection
Natural selection

... 22 The Mechanisms of Evolution • 22.1 What Facts Form the Base of Our Understanding of Evolution? • 22.2 What Are the Mechanisms of Evolutionary Change? • 22.3 What Evolutionary Mechanisms Result in ...
HCC Anthropology Lecture Chapter 1
HCC Anthropology Lecture Chapter 1

... come from, what does the history of our species look like c) How are humans around the world like or unlike each other? (what causes the patterns of human variation that we see) d) How does culture affect biology, and vice versa? (what impact have rapid cultural changes in our species recent past ha ...
FIT C Ch3 evolution
FIT C Ch3 evolution

... Three Varieties of Selection - Phylogenic (Darwinian selection) - Ontogenic (operant selection) - Cultural (memetic selection) • The three varieties may work in concert or in opposition to one another (consider drugs as reinforcers in ontogeny, but with deleterious effects at the other levels of se ...
Evolution, dispersal of genetics and Fisher’s equation
Evolution, dispersal of genetics and Fisher’s equation

EVOLUTION (L567)
EVOLUTION (L567)

... Cost of sex, mutation-selection balance, Muller’s ratchet) (12) Genetic diversity and sex: the ecological hypotheses (13) FIRST EXAM Recombination (Burt&Bell paper). Pluralism in models of sex/rec (14) Synthesis (14) Epistasis, linkage disequilibrium. Sexual selection I (14, 15) Sexual selection: II ...
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Dual inheritance theory

Dual inheritance theory (DIT), also known as gene–culture coevolution or biocultural evolution, was developed in the 1960's through early 1980s to explain how human behavior is a product of two different and interacting evolutionary processes: genetic evolution and cultural evolution. In DIT, culture is defined as information and/or behavior acquired through social learning. One of the theory's central claims is that culture evolves partly through a Darwinian selection process, which dual inheritance theorists often describe by analogy to genetic evolution.'Culture', in this context is defined as 'socially learned behavior', and 'social learning' is defined as copying behaviors observed in others or acquiring behaviors through being taught by others. Most of the modeling done in the field relies on the first dynamic (copying) though it can be extended to teaching. Social learning at its simplest involves blind copying of behaviors from a model (someone observed behaving), though it is also understood to have many potential biases, including success bias (copying from those who are perceived to be better off), status bias (copying from those with higher status), homophily (copying from those most like ourselves), conformist bias (disproportionately picking up behaviors that more people are performing), etc.. Understanding social learning is a system of pattern replication, and understanding that there are different rates of survival for different socially learned cultural variants, this sets up, by definition, an evolutionary structure: Cultural Evolution.Because genetic evolution is relatively well understood, most of DIT examines cultural evolution and the interactions between cultural evolution and genetic evolution.
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