2003
DOI: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2003.tb00583.x
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Stability of the G-Matrix in a Population Experiencing Pleiotropic Mutation, Stabilizing Selection, and Genetic Drift

Abstract: Abstract. Quantitative genetics theory provides a framework that predicts the effects of selection on a phenotype consisting of a suite of complex traits. However, the ability of existing theory to reconstruct the history of selection or to predict the future trajectory of evolution depends upon the evolutionary dynamics of the genetic variancecovariance matrix (G-matrix). Thus, the central focus of the emerging field of comparative quantitative genetics is the evolution of the G-matrix. Existing analytical th… Show more

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Cited by 247 publications
(323 citation statements)
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“…Comparisons of G matrices sampled from conspecific populations and related species often show that the matrices have one or more principal components in common or are even proportional Steppan et al 2002). Computer simulations suggest that G matrix stability is promoted by large effective population size and mutational correlation (Jones et al 2003). Persistent stabilizing (and correlational) selection may also produce stability in G by promoting alignment of G with the major axes of the adaptive landscape (Jones et al 2003(Jones et al , 2004(Jones et al , 2007.…”
Section: Methodological Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Comparisons of G matrices sampled from conspecific populations and related species often show that the matrices have one or more principal components in common or are even proportional Steppan et al 2002). Computer simulations suggest that G matrix stability is promoted by large effective population size and mutational correlation (Jones et al 2003). Persistent stabilizing (and correlational) selection may also produce stability in G by promoting alignment of G with the major axes of the adaptive landscape (Jones et al 2003(Jones et al , 2004(Jones et al , 2007.…”
Section: Methodological Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirical and simulation research suggests that different aspects of G evolve in different ways and in response to multiple forces (Phillips et al 2001;Steppan et al 2002;Jones et al 2003Jones et al , 2004Jones et al , 2007. Consequently, it is useful to reparameterize G into what can be considered size, shape, and orientation parameters, as suggested by Jones et al (2003).…”
Section: Theoretical Framework Divergence Under the Neutral Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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