「SELECTION」の共起表現一覧(1語左が「natural」)
該当件数 : 101件
In natural | selection, negative selection or purifying selection i |
In summary, while natural | selection results from the struggle to survive, sexual |
To explain natural | selection, Dawkins first explains artificial selection |
) "The logic of social exchange: Has natural | selection shaped how humans reason? |
attle evolved through artificial and natural | selection in the French region now known as Limousin. |
Dawkins concludes that evolution by natural | selection can explain apparent design in nature. |
osed structures may have facilitated natural | selection in RNA molecules. |
study on HIV ties in perfectly will natural | selection and evolution. |
The Brahman, through rigorous natural | selection, developed disease resistance, overall hardi |
re then moves into an explanation of natural | selection, which brings forth designoid objects. |
At that point natural | selection will tend to eliminate the hybrids. |
This mechanism has evolved through natural | selection to ensure that human groups survive. |
therefore subject to the effects of natural | selection and sexual selection. |
e 1980s and 1990s he did research on natural | selection and species divergence in fruit flies (Droso |
alance between mutational biases and natural | selection for translational optimization. |
Therefore, Darwin's theory of natural | selection acting on random mutations applies to bacter |
s that provides a mechanism by which natural | selection could work. |
So Kettlewell concluded that natural | selection from industrial melanism caused the moths to |
lt was a combination of evolution by natural | selection and Mendelian inheritance, the modern evolut |
published his theory of evolution by natural | selection in On the Origin of Species in 1859. |
The theory of natural | selection, in its more general formulation, deals with |
"It is said that natural | selection favors characteristics that maximize an indi |
or become narrower as the result of natural | selection in order to enhance the chances of mating. |
important role in the regulation and natural | selection of the populations of small and large mammal |
that religion itself evolved due to natural | selection, in which case religion conferred some sort |
medicinal use appears to be causing natural | selection to favour shorter plants in areas that are h |
selfish gene theory postulates that natural | selection will increase the frequency of those genes w |
winism is the totalizing claim that [natural | selection] accounts for all the diversity and complexi |
He claims that natural | selection can only explain the evolution of such adapt |
There follows a process of natural | selection for clay crystals which trap certain forms o |
chanism for the evolution of life by natural | selection conflicts with some views on creation of lif |
t does not contain concepts, such as natural | selection that are responsible for driving evolution. |
ins explains the basic mechanisms of natural | selection, and tells the story of how Charles Darwin d |
of Darwinian evolution, particularly natural | selection, to explain contemporary human development. |
As natural | selection proceeded, pre-cells may have developed ster |
Indeed, some cases of evolution by natural | selection can only be understood by considering how bi |
ered several known targets of recent natural | selection, and suggested several novel targets. |
er to Darwin's proposed mechanism of natural | selection, in comparison to more recent mechanisms suc |
oposing a theory of evolution due to natural | selection that prompted Charles Darwin to publish his |
e" (by genetic drift) would then (by natural | selection) drive a deme population from one stable ada |
An emerging synthesis holds that natural | selection works on many levels (genetic up to the ecos |
in allele frequency, be it caused by natural | selection, mutation, migration or genetic drift by def |
However, natural | selection does act in a such a way that those that are |
he relationship between genetics and natural | selection in plants. |
behavior must be considered part of natural | selection, as aggression leading to death or serious i |
im to discover Darwinian concepts of natural | selection and evolution. |
d moth is in fact a valid example of natural | selection and adaptation. |
he development of Darwin's theory of natural | selection made progress in this house, and their child |
stinctly recognises the principle of natural | selection, and this is the first recognition which has |
And as natural | selection works solely by and for the good of each bei |
e significance) in a new environment natural | selection will likely favor it. |
altruism, then our understanding of natural | selection becomes more complicated than simply "surviv |
explained and defended the theory of natural | selection, first widely presented in 1859 by Charles D |
Under such conditions natural | selection would also favor the development of barriers |
in a regulatory framework derived by natural | selection amongst species, where one being's harmful w |
oncept of irreducible complexity has natural | selection accounting for most of evolution but the int |
ry could only come about by means of natural | selection, and all of them wrote about it. |
tion of evidence and arguments about natural | selection, genetic mutation, the fossil record, prebio |
inst Darwin's theory of evolution by natural | selection, Kimura maintained (and most evolutionary bi |
elphia Inquirer noting "Evolution by natural | selection and the origin of life are entirely differen |
Wine, thought by many to be the natural | selection to ascend to manager, was not given the job |
d the universe" and flip the coin of natural | selection again, we might find ourselves living in a w |
Lotka proposed that natural | selection was, at its root, a struggle among organisms |
ndom mutation, rather than nonrandom natural | selection, was the driving force behind evolution. |
f plants, and it's suggested that by natural | selection a hardier variety will emerge. |
her pesticides also encourages rapid natural | selection of resistant insects, plants and other organ |
wn through generations, preserved by natural | selection because of their adaptive function in a give |
include more elements than genes and natural | selection, to the view that modern evolutionary theory |
sel Wallace who proposed a theory of natural | selection at the same time as Charles Darwin lived in |
ded to reminisce about the status of natural | selection in pre-war Oxford and how it changed over th |
among the finches of the Galapagos, natural | selection sometimes takes place so rapidly we can watc |
t characterize adults the product of natural | selection pressures operating over the course of evolu |
Under natural | selection, a gene encoding a trait that enhances the f |
a fever, that show strong signals of natural | selection in West Africans. |
whether it is an adaptive product of natural | selection or is more like a kind of spandrel. |
g or disparaging evidence supporting natural | selection while repeatedly implying that Kettlewell an |
ntific controversy over evolution by natural | selection will be enlightened by Why Darwin Matters, w |
In it he proposed that natural | selection could cause the reproductive isolation of tw |
ed Russell Wallace which posits that natural | selection can contribute to the reproductive isolation |
rces-such as variation, inheritance, natural | selection, and time-can account for the principal feat |
at there must be an understanding of natural | selection distinct from that of evolution, and that th |
nge of fields including evolution by natural | selection, object relations theory (psychoanalysis), c |
ained by blind, unguided chance plus natural | selection, and thus thinks that the issue of whether D |
escribed as transgressing the law of natural | selection, and the expense of such care is depicted as |
each the mechanisms of variation and natural | selection, or to teach the prevailing scientific theor |
ionary synthesis places on genes and natural | selection as explanation of living structures and proc |
Kim Sterelny (2007) cites this rapid natural | selection as illustrating an important point about per |
eir papers setting out the theory of natural | selection, which was received quietly at the time but |
the genome that have been subject to natural | selection and an algorithm which explains the effects |
latter is a defense of the theory of natural | selection against the attacks of St George Mivart, and |
tific assessment of the evidence for natural | selection in the peppered moth (Biston betularia), muc |
ues for the irrefutable existence of natural | selection by detailing numerous examples of DNA which |
story of a species, which led to the natural | selection of the features in question. |
ween Darwin's theory of evolution by natural | selection and Mendel's work was reconciled in the 1920 |
per acknowledges the significance of natural | selection; it merely argues against panselectionism (a |
etic drift, largely independent from natural | selection, was controversial at the time; the provocat |
ause the mode of reproduction allows natural | selection to take place in wild populations of such pl |
s taken to suggest that evolution by natural | selection is not capable of explaining some behaviours |
influence of industrial melanism on natural | selection in moths, showing why moths are darker in po |
eave by reproducing on its own, then natural | selection will favor giving the alarm call, provided t |
etic Theory” having in view that the natural | selection underlined by Charles Darwin is to be applie |
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