NEApr 17, 2017

The Emergence of Canalization and Evolvability in an Open-Ended, Interactive Evolutionary System

arXiv:1704.05143v212 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses a fundamental gap in evolutionary biology and computational modeling, with potential implications for engineering applications, though it is incremental in demonstrating canalization in a specific system.

The paper tackled the problem of why developmental canalization, a mechanism for evolvability, rarely evolves in computational simulations, by revealing a unique system where it did emerge, showing that genomes entrench frequently explored dimensions of variation and that modular, hierarchical organization correlates with increased fitness.

Natural evolution has produced a tremendous diversity of functional organisms. Many believe an essential component of this process was the evolution of evolvability, whereby evolution speeds up its ability to innovate by generating a more adaptive pool of offspring. One hypothesized mechanism for evolvability is developmental canalization, wherein certain dimensions of variation become more likely to be traversed and others are prevented from being explored (e.g. offspring tend to have similarly sized legs, and mutations affect the length of both legs, not each leg individually). While ubiquitous in nature, canalization almost never evolves in computational simulations of evolution. Not only does that deprive us of in silico models in which to study the evolution of evolvability, but it also raises the question of which conditions give rise to this form of evolvability. Answering this question would shed light on why such evolvability emerged naturally and could accelerate engineering efforts to harness evolution to solve important engineering challenges. In this paper we reveal a unique system in which canalization did emerge in computational evolution. We document that genomes entrench certain dimensions of variation that were frequently explored during their evolutionary history. The genetic representation of these organisms also evolved to be highly modular and hierarchical, and we show that these organizational properties correlate with increased fitness. Interestingly, the type of computational evolutionary experiment that produced this evolvability was very different from traditional digital evolution in that there was no objective, suggesting that open-ended, divergent evolutionary processes may be necessary for the evolution of evolvability.

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