Publications - Published papers
Please find below publications of our group. Currently, we list 565 papers. Some of the publications are in collaboration with the group of Sonja Prohaska and are also listed in the publication list for her individual group. Access to published papers (
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Genotype Phenotype Maps
Peter F. Stadler, Bärbel M. R. Stadler
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Status: Published
Biological Theory 3: 268-279 (2006)
Abstract
The current implementation of the Neo-Darwinian model of evolution typically assumes that
the set of possible phenotypes is organized into a highly symmetric and regular space.
Most conveniently, a Euclidean vector space is used, representing phenotypic properties
by real-valued variables. Computationalwork on the biophysical genotype-phenotype model of
RNA folding, however, suggests a rather different picture. If phenotypes are organized according
to genetic accessibility, the resulting space lacks a metric and can be formalized only in terms
of a relatively unfamiliar structure. Patterns of phenotypic evolution-such as punctuation, irreversibility,
and modularity-result naturally from the properties of the genotype-phenotype map, which, given the
genetic accessibility structure, define accessibility in the phenotype space. The classical framework,
however, addresses these patterns exclusively in terms of natural selection on suitably constructed
fitness landscapes. Recent work has extended the explanatory level for phenotypic evolution from fitness
considerations alone to include the topological structure of phenotype space as induced by the
genotype-phenotype map. Lewontin's notion of "quasi-independence" of characters can also be formalized
in topological terms: it corresponds to the assumption that a region of the phenotype space is
represented by a product space of orthogonal factors. In this picture, each character corresponds
to a factor of a region of the phenotype space. We consider any region of the phenotype space
that has a given factorization as a "type", i.e., as a set of phenotypes that share the same
set of phenotypic characters. Thus, a theory of character identity can be developed that is
based on the correspondence of local factors in different regions of the phenotypespace.