Results 261 to 270 of about 12,930 (292)
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1997
Abstract If Professor David Glass was cool towards my work at the London School of Economics, Professor Lionel S. Pemose, FRS, at University College was equally so. I believe he definitely saw in me the eugenical spectre I mentioned in the first introduction.
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Abstract If Professor David Glass was cool towards my work at the London School of Economics, Professor Lionel S. Pemose, FRS, at University College was equally so. I believe he definitely saw in me the eugenical spectre I mentioned in the first introduction.
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Inclusive Fitness and Hamilton’s Rule
2021This chapter evaluates the long and intimate association between the gene’s-eye view and the work of W.D. Hamilton. Hamilton’s key insight was that individual organisms can affect the transmission of their genes through personal reproductive success, as well as through the success of close relatives.
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Inclusive Fitness and Hamilton’s Rule
2015This chapter examines how the logic of inclusive fitness theory can be mathematically formalized using the Price equation, and how that formalization can be used to derive Hamilton's rule in its simplest form, as applied to unconditional behaviors having additive effects on fitness.
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Nonadditive Interactions and Hamilton’s Rule
2015This chapter examines what happens in nonadditive interactions when such interactions take place between relatives, and how Hamilton's rule can be extended in two different ways to accommodate such nonadditivity. It first considers the selective pressures on nonadditive behaviors directed towards relatives by making use of the replicator dynamics to ...
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Hamilton’s Rule as an Organizing Framework
2017Queller’s version of Hamilton’s rule (HRG), derived from the Price equation, states that the mean breeding value for a social character increases if and only if rb > c, where r is the coefficient of relatedness between social partners, b is the benefit conferred on recipients, and c is the cost incurred by actors.
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