This week I'm travelling to the University of Georgia to participate in the week of Darwin Day activities they have going there. It's a great program, full of interesting lectures and events.

I'll be talking about Neandertal genetics on Thursday, February 11, in the Reception Hall of the Tate Center at 3:30 in the afternoon. If you're in the Athens area -- heck, if you're anywhere in Georgia! -- I'd love to see you there!

If you can't make it on Thursday, there will be another really cool lecture Friday at noon, in the same place, by René Bobe, expert in the field of paleoecology and human evolution. His title: "Lucy, I'm Home! Humanity's Six-million-Year Journey". And on Wednesday evening, artist Ray Troll will give his perspective on "An Artists View of the History of Life".

Meanwhile, here in Madison the annual Darwin Day event will be held on Saturday the 13th, in the Microbial Sciences Building. If you weren't there last year, well Microbial Sciences is a really beautiful new building, with a huge atrium and central auditorium. My students and many other biology and evolution-related labs on campus will have displays and posters up for all ages, from 10 to 3:30.

At the same time, a lecture program and panel discussion will be running. The featured lecturer is Jonathan Losos, whose work understanding the incredible ecological diversity of Anolis lizards in the Caribbean has become one of the most important case studies in ecology and evolution today. There will be a workshop for teachers featuring activities centered around these lizards, it's a tremendous opportunity to bring current biology research into education.

Filed under

Science has a one-page editorial by National Academy of Science President Ralph Cicerone. He alludes to the climate change scandals of the last few months, and points to a significant loss of public confidence in science as a result:

In the wake of the [University of East Anglia] controversy, I have been contacted by many U.S. and world leaders in science, business, and government. Their assessments and those from various editorials, added to results from scattered public opinion polls, suggest that public opinion has moved toward the view that scientists often try to suppress alternative hypotheses and ideas and that scientists will withhold data and try to manipulate some aspects of peer review to prevent dissent. This view reflects the fragile nature of trust between science and society, demonstrating that the perceived misbehavior of even a few scientists can diminish the credibility of science as a whole.

Cicerone argues that scientists need to shape up. The only way to maintain confidence in the scientific enterprise is to establish "clarity and transparency":

Clarity and transparency must be reinforced to build and maintain trust—internal and external—in science. Scientists are taught to describe experiments, data, and calculations fully so that other scientists can replicate the research. Last year, the Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP) of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), National Academy of Engineering, and Institute of Medicine put forth a framework for dealing with research data,* emphasizing that "Research data, methods and other information integral to publicly reported results should be publicly accessible." Some journals have established policies that require the sharing of materials and data. However, post-publication complaints regarding data sharing persist. Despite many efforts, the scientific community has failed to uniformly integrate these standards into their practices.

Access to data may not be enough. In the case of climate research, open access to models and software is equally important -- otherwise, results are not replicable. This means greater support must be given from grant agencies for public accessibility and publication of research methods, including software archives.

It also means that data sharing policies must have some teeth in them. At a minimum, funding renewal should be contingent on meeting the guidelines for data sharing proposed in grant applications. In 2010, there is no reason in the world why these cannot be downloaded freely from third parties, so that the scientists do not feel "harassed" by requests for information.

References:

Cicerone RJ. 2010. Ensuring integrity in science. Science 327:624. doi:10.1126/science.1187612

Gene-a-dope

Science gives us a "policy forum" this week on gene doping. The lead author, Theodor Friedmann, is the chair of the "Gene Doping Expert Group" at the World Anti-Doping Agency.

The essay describes the current potential of gene doping, and is a good short review. I found the paragraphs on "marketing gene doping" very interesting:

Athletes are an especially vulnerable population in the marketing of performance enhancement (31). Reputable athletes or coaches with little knowledge of genetics are at a disadvantage in assessing "scientific" claims that appear in advertisements. Marketing is particularly worrisome when the science is still a work in progress, when a person's health can be adversely affected, and when consumer knowledge about genetics is low. Although advertisements promoting products that promise to enhance athletic performance have pervaded the Internet for many years, recently it has become home for advertisements that promote products to "alter muscle genes...by activating your genetic machinery" (32), or that state "your genetic limitations are a thing of the past!" (33) or "Finally, every bodybuilder can be genetically gifted!" (34).

These are people who make easy targets for nutrigenomics and other questionable areas of "health enhancement." A large number of amateur bodybuilders and fitness enthusiasts create a "gray market" supporting questionable products, and these products themselves support the ecosystem of effective performance enhancement drugs. They also create a lot of biochemical noise for those who want to find new tests for performance enhancers.

The essay includes a few paragraphs that describe the prospects of future detection of gene doping. It may be very difficult. Detecting some synthetic performance-enhancing agents requires the cooperation of primary producers, who add tracers to their products. Gene doping might enhance performance for periods months or years after the vector is administered, and may not require dosage that would significantly alter isotopic or chemical signatures, even if they contained such tracers. The authors suggest that the incidental biochemical effects of gene doping might enable the identification of a "signature" of such products:

For instance, exposure of murine myoblasts to IGF-1 has been shown to induce transcriptional and proteomic changes that may eventually constitute a "signature" specific for exogenous IGF-1 exposure (29, 30). Of course, the application of these kinds of global assays would require rigorous validation of a connection with specific doping agents or methods.

I am very skeptical -- it's likely that the "signature" of a doped individual will not differ appreciably from the normal variability of tissue metabolism, particularly in the subset of high-performance athletes. Still, it may be possible to find one particular tissue type that provides a high-information-content message about normal versus doped processes. I just think that a lot of innocent athletes are likely to get snared in this net as it closes in on clinical validation.

References:

Friedmann T, Rabin O, Frankel MS. 2010. Gene doping and sport. Science 327:647-648. doi:10.1126/science.1177801

After last week's unveiling of Apple's iPad, there has been a quiet current of dismay by people looking for a not-yet piece of hardware. I have some sympathy for the perspective of Mark Pilgrim, in his piece, "Tinkerer's Sunset". It begins:

When DVD Jon was arrested after breaking the CSS encryption algorithm, he was charged with “unauthorized computer trespassing.” That led his lawyers to ask the obvious question, “On whose computer did he trespass?” The prosecutor’s answer: “his own.”

If that doesn’t make your heart skip a beat, you can stop reading now.

Pilgrim goes on to describe a personal history of programming, starting as a kid on the Apple ][e -- a history that basically mirrors my own experiences learning to code. He contrasts this history with the recent trend -- in the iPhone, iPod Touch and now iPad -- to exert more control over the programs that can run on these Apple platforms. Can Pilgrim's kids expect to learn programming with the freely accessible tools that used to exist on every computer?

Well, I'm not as reticent about the iPad development system. For one thing, the entire development kit is available, it's just not free. I don't see how this is really any different than paying for the Pascal compiler I used on the Apple IIgs in 1987, or paying for Microsoft BASIC on the PC. For another thing, today's Macs all come with the Xcode tools free and Python preinstalled. Python is a darned sight better to learn programming than BASIC was, and you can run Python scripts on the iPhone, and presumably the iPad too.

The real concern here is between "cheap" and "cool". The iPad looks like it will be cool; meaning a kid can get lots of nerd cred by doing magical tricks with it. Now, the same kid could use a $150 desktop with Ubuntu and open source compilers to program magical tricks. That would leave $450 left in his pocket, that he saved by not buying the iPad and developer kit. He could use that to pay for three years of hosting his magical trick, or two years with a modest Google ad.

I get that the Ubuntu box isn't as cool. And that many kids are a lot more likely to get a little time on a parent's cool tablet than to get their own $150 box. But does it make sense to say that a new product restricts freedom, when we live in a world now that lacks the product entirely? I'd say it adds a certain kind of freedom, for users who want it, and fails to add others.

Anyway, for a less nuanced critique, I'll link to "iPad Snivelers: Put Up or Shut Up"

The iPad isn't a threat to anything except the success of inferior products. And if anything's dystopian about the future it portends, it's an American copyright system that's been out of whack since 1996.

I'm not sure that's true. The rapid pace of hardware evolution means that software is for all intents and purposes useless after fifteen or twenty years. There might be something in Windows 3.0 or Mac System 7 that would be useful today, but probably not in comparison to open source alternatives. In the software sense it doesn't matter if copyrights expire in 17 years or 95, unless you're a modder who wants to make an iPhone version of old Nintendo ROMs.

Filed under

Data point:

This is the time in my introductory class when I discuss genetic disorders, and I described the new Counsyl test as part of my lecture today.

I took a quick poll -- how many of my undergraduates would be interested in getting a test that told them their carrier status for a hundred genetic disorders. More than half of them expressed interest. That just seems huge to me -- I don't think I'd have seen the same result ten or even five years ago. There's been a real change in attitude about genetic testing in the last few years as technology has gotten cheaper and has more public attention.

Ewen Callaway in New Scientist:

More individuals got a taste of the infant than is typical when the apes share meat. They also spent 7½ hours eating the body – longer than they take over a similar-sized monkey. Some even played with it. "If they just think of it as another piece of meat, why do they behave differently with it?" he asks.

Of course you'll see a lot of rare things when you spend enough time watching. If the average individual can go through her entire life without eating the flesh of a conspecific, it's not probably very important. But seeing it rarely puts it in the range of behavior -- common enough in evolutionary timescales for either natural or cultural selection to pick it up if it were useful.

Filed under

Here's a nice, symmetrical pair of stories:

DNA testing on 2,000-year-old bones in Italy reveal East Asian ancestry

...

Prowse's team cannot say how recently he, or his ancestors, left East Asia: he could have made the journey alone, or his East Asian genes might have come from a distant maternal ancestor. However, the oxygen isotope evidence indicates that he was definitely not born in Italy and likely came here from elsewhere in the Roman Empire.

...

In addition to the mystery the find uncovers, Prowse sees the broader scientific impact for archaeologists, physical anthropologists, and classicists: The grave goods from this individual's burial gave no indication that he was foreign-born or of East Asian descent.

OK, that's one way. Now the other:

Skeleton of Western Man Found In Ancient Mongolian Tomb

Consider an older gentleman whose skeleton lay in one of more than 200 tombs recently excavated at a 2,000-year-old cemetery in eastern Mongolia, near China’s northern border. DNA extracted from this man’s bones pegs him as a descendant of Europeans or western Asians. Yet he still assumed a prominent position in ancient Mongolia’s Xiongnu Empire, say geneticist Kyung-Yong Kim of Chung-Ang University in Seoul, South Korea, and his colleagues.

...

This long-dead individual possessed a set of genetic mutations on his Y chromosome, which is inherited from paternal ancestors, that commonly appears today among male speakers of Indo-European languages in eastern Europe, central Asia and northern India, Kim’s team reports in an upcoming American Journal of Physical Anthropology. The same man displayed a pattern of mitochondrial DNA mutations, inherited from maternal ancestors, characteristic of speakers of modern Indo-European languages in central Asia, the researchers say.

Hmmm... it's almost like they're reading from the same script...

It's not obvious what these finds are uncovering. Is this evidence of very rare migration across very long distances? Is it a weak pattern of long-distance genetic similarity that has been partially masked by later expansions of populations?

It would help if the stories gave some assessment of how unexpected such finds would be today. Both with regard to the mtDNA-Y chromosome "ancestry" axis, and with respect to the autosomes. Bower mentions work on Kurgan burials which is more informative:

Add to those discoveries a report in the September 2009 Human Genetics. Geneticist Christine Keyser of the University of Strasbourg in France and her colleagues found that nine of 26 skeletons previously excavated at 11 Kurgan sites in northeastern Russia possess a Y chromosome mutation pattern thought to mark the eastward expansion of early Indo-Europeans. That same genetic signature characterizes the Duurlig Nars man.

That's a frequency. The more singular finds are much harder to deal with statistically. I also worry about PCR errors when a result is only present in one or two specimens. Looking at dozens of individuals, low-likelihood errors start to become more and more likely.

The chimpanzee males who adopt orphans

The value of long-term field studies: Christophe Boesch and colleagues report on adoption in the Taï Forest chimpanzee study population -- where more than 30 years of observations have produced 18 well-defined cases of adoption of orphaned individuals. They considered "adoption" to be the provision of maternal care (e.g., carrying, feeding, food sharing, defense) for more than two months. It's possibly unfortunate terminology, as it leads to headlines like mine. Yet it is really interesting behavior.

It would be nice to say that these cases represent 18 happy endings, but these adoptions did not increase the probability of survival compared to orphaned individuals who did not receive ongoing care. There were a couple of cases where females breastfed orphaned infants "for many years," but there seem to be several sad stories too.

Sometimes, the care for the orphaned juveniles was given by males:

Remarkably, all adult males of the East Group that adopted young orphans went a step further by investing in unweaned small infants and carrying them dorsally during travel for many months (see Figures 3 and 4 of Porthos with Gia) (Table 3). Since, Taï chimpanzees walk about 8 km per day on average, this represents a notable investment. Porthos' adoption of Gia lasted for 17 months, until his death due to Anthrax, and he was seen to carry her even in extremely risky situations, such as during encounters with neighboring communities [26]. Furthermore, some males were seen to share their night nest with their adopted infant (Table 3). Fredy, the 3rd ranking male of the East Group, adopted Victor, the son of Vanessa, who died from Anthrax in late December 2008, and shared his nest with him every night, carried him on his back for all long travels, and shared the Coula nuts he opened from December 2008 to July 2009. For example, on February 17th, Fredy cracked 196 Coula nuts for 2h05mn and shared pieces of 79% of them. This gives a measure of the altruistic investment made in an unrelated infant.

That sounds pretty amazing. I think it's very relevant to human evolution, as orphaning must have been very common with the high mortality rates of the past.

The authors propose that adoption is basically a side effect of prosocial behavior in these chimps brought on by leopard predation:

[T]he resulting high predation pressure exerted by these cats seems to have promoted strong within-group solidarity in the form of care for all injured individuals as well as joint coalition defense against the leopards [16], [26]. Once established, this care for the welfare of others seems to have been generalized to new social contexts, including adoption [26]. Any discussions about the evolution of altruism must include the caveat that dissimilar socio-ecological conditions will lead to important population differences in both chimpanzees and humans and we need to remain very careful before making any claims about species differences.

Well, if there was such a simple psychological correlation between various kinds of prosocial behavior, it would make life a lot easier for those of us trying to figure out what happened to humans.

References:

Boesch C, Bolé C, Eckhardt N, Boesch H. 2010. Altruism in forest chimpanzees: the case of adoption. PLoS ONE 5:e8901. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0008901

Filed under

Today's sketchbook:

Ardi's skull

I've been sketching some studies of the Ardi CT skull reconstruction.

Robot genetics

Dario Floreano and Laurent Keller describe experiments that combine genetic algorithms and robots. It's a review essay rather than a description of new research, but unlike most descriptions of "evolutionary robotics", it's actually directed toward biologists instead of AI researchers.

In this essay we will examine key experiments that illustrate how, for example, robots whose genes are translated into simple neural networks can evolve the ability to navigate, escape predators, coadapt brains and body morphologies, and cooperate. We present mostly—but not only—experimental results performed in our laboratory, which satisfy the following criteria. First, the experiments were at least partly carried out with real robots, allowing us to present a video showing the behaviours of the evolved robots. Second, the robot's neural networks had a simple architecture with no synaptic plasticity, no ontogenetic development, and no detailed modelling of ion channels and spike transmission. Third, the genomes were directly mapped into the neural network (i.e., no gene-to-gene interaction, time-dependent dynamics, or ontogenetic plasticity). By limiting our analysis to these studies we are able to highlight the strength of the process of Darwinian selection in comparable simple systems exposed to different environmental conditions.

Some of the simplest machine learning experiments are basically like those used in behavioral psychology -- put the robots in a maze, make them remember where the food is, that sort of thing. Robots are simpler than rats, so the researchers can reverse-engineer the "evolved" software at the end of a series of experiments to see what worked and why:

Interestingly, the driving speed of the best-evolved robots was approximately half of the maximum possible speed and did not increase even when the evolutionary experiments were continued for another 100 generations. Additional experiments where the speed was artificially increased revealed that fast-moving robots had high rates of collisions because the 300-ms refresh rate of the sensors did not allow them to detect walls sufficiently in advance at high speed. Thus, the robots evolved to move at intermediate speeds because of their limited neural and sensory abilities.

Figuring out that particular optimization would drive a team of human programmers crazy. Can you imagine? "Why do they keep running into that wall?!"

On the other hand, dumb selection took a lot of generations to get to that point. You can't say selection was more efficient. If you had a crew of programming grunts and forced them to sit in a room for 100 robot generations, they'd come up with something.

It's quite possible that a human would have come up with much better software, by pushing the robots past the limits of mutations on their "genomes". Selection has its own "sensor limitations", it can get stuck in a local optimum, and depends on the mutation structure to explore the landscape.

It helps if the landscape has some strong correlation structure. That's what came to my mind as I read their account of experiments to make robots cooperate:

However, when the arena contained both large and small tokens, the behaviour of robots was influenced by the group kin structure. In groups of unrelated robots (i.e., robots whose genomes where not more similar within than between groups), robots invariably specialised in pushing the small objects, which was the most efficient strategy to maximise their own individual fitness them (i.e., large tokens provided an equal direct payoff as a small token but were more difficult to successfully push). By contrast, the presence of related robots within groups allowed the evolution of altruism. When groups were formed of “clonal” robots all having the same genome, individuals primarily pushed the large tokens even though it was costly, in terms of individual fitness, for the robots pushing (Video S6).

If you wonder how robots have "kin", it's that they share similar (or the same) genomes. The simplicity of the behaviors suggests a functional explanation for kin selection -- for many kinds of tasks, it may simply be easier to cooperate with other individuals who "work" the same way. Different approaches to the same task may clash.

They describe a similar result for cooperation by information sharing:

Similar results were obtained in experiments where groups of light-emitting, foraging robots could communicate the position of a food source at a cost to themselves because of the resulting increased competition near food. In these experiments, robots again readily evolved costly communication when they were genetically related, but altruistic communication never evolved in groups of unrelated robots when selection operated at the individual level [38],[39].

The next logical step for this kind of research is nano-scale: evolutionary robotics on molecular machines. Which is scary. I hope they have the sense not to train them up by eating biological systems...

There's this old course on the books here, "Human aspects of robotics". I suppose it was taught back in the 80's when robots looked like they would replace all the manufacturing workers. I've often thought that someday it may be revived as with robots as the heroes instead of the villains.

References:

Floreano D, Keller L. 2010. Evolution of adaptive behavior in robots by means of Darwinian selection. PLoS Biol 8:e1000292. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000292

Regarding the sad state of science journalism, or the public perception thereof:

I was reading this article in Popular Mechanics, "How to fall 35,000 feet--and survive", basically a tongue-in-cheek discussion of unlikely cases of survival from no-parachute freefall. And at the end of the article is a long stream of comments about one line in the article:

Lower body weight reduces terminal velocity, plus reduced surface area decreases the chance of impalement upon landing.

Now, just to be clear, that's statistically true -- people who weigh less will almost always have lower terminal velocities during a fall. There's no controversy, it's basic physics applied to human body shapes.

So it's interesting to watch the confusion unroll. Several commenters think that Galileo proved that all terminal velocities are equal. (That would be the sorry state of science literacy.) Then there are a bunch of commenters who show up to correct those people, by claiming that lower mass means less momentum. (Getting warmer....). Then they're contradicted by the people who claim that smaller people have lower surface area, so they should fall faster. (Getting colder...).

My favorite:

Lower weight reduces terminal velocity because f = mass x acceleration. If your mass is less the acceleration pushing up on you is more so your downward acceleration is reduced.

N2F! (That would be Newton's Second Law FAIL!).

And then there are the people who point out that the ratio of surface area to volume is allometric, so lower mass tends to go with relatively high surface area (Warmer...). After a while, a redundant slew of references to the Wikipedia "Terminal Velocity" article start showing up. You get the idea, it's like grading an undergraduate physics essay. It converges chaotically on the truth.

What I noticed: Pretty much all the immediate reactions assume that the writer made an obvious mistake. They more easily accept that a clear error of fact, opposite to the truth, was printed by a popular science magazine, than stop and think, or do a cursory check to see if their understanding might be, shall we say, incomplete.

That's the sign of a profession in trouble! Lazy people are universal. Lazy people trained to assume you're wrong are a problem.

The Wall Street Journal visits Inanke, Zimbabwe, to look at prehistoric cave paintings: "Magnificence on Cave Walls".

Julien Riel-Salvatore: "Neanderthal wooden structures, sleeping areas and group size at Abric Romaní"

Forget "Right Guard" -- positive selection on armpit odor?

A strong positive selection in mate choice for low-odorant partners with a dysfunctional ABCC11 gene seems a plausible explanation for this striking frequency of a loss-of-function allele.

Vitamin D receptor polymorphisms affect hepatitis infection rates?

Peter Woit on Big Think: "The problem with trendy physicists."

Filed under

Miocene ape review, in brief

Science has a short essay by Terry Harrison this week about Miocene ape evolution: "Apes among the tangled branches of human origins."

This is the sort of article that shows just how frustrating the Miocene apes can be. It's short, probably not even 1500 words, and it has more than 20 genus names stacked into it -- and he doesn't even list Proconsul and its Early Miocene ilk.

I've been trying to give a longer account of Miocene ape evolution here, by dribs and drabs. You can get most of the list under my "Miocene" category. Last fall's account of "Late Miocene apes from Africa" expands significantly on a topic that Harrison glosses -- what do we know about African apes during the time that chimpanzees, gorillas, and humans were diverging?

There are two phylogenetic issues related to Miocene apes that command a lot of attention. Where did hominins come from? -- that's one issue. The other is, how are Asian and African apes related?

This latter question is important because it helps to establish the timeline of orangutan divergence from us and subsequent evolution. It also determines the position of the European apes -- and thereby, whether their locomotor and dietary diversity is relevant to later ape evolution.

Harrison comes down in favor of the hypothesis that Dryopithecus and most other European apes were stem hominids -- that is, collaterals of all living great apes, not specially related to the African apes and humans. The main alternative to that view is that the European apes mostly represent the African side of an early Asia-Africa biogeographic split, such that chimpanzees, gorillas and humans (the hominines) descend from Dryopithecus or some similar lineage closely aligned with these European apes. Harrison is willing to admit the Late Miocene Greek ape Ouranopithecus to the African ape lineage, but in his view the earlier European apes belong to one or more side-branches of the great apes.

A question: If Harrison is correct here, does that affect the paleontological evidence for the human-orangutan divergence? That is, if Dryopithecus were a hominine, it is plausible that the Asian/African ape divergence actually happened in Eurasia not long before 12 million years ago. If Dryopithecus branched off before the African and Asian ape divergence, and Sivapithecus was derived from an African ape, does that make the divergence earlier or later?

I'll consider that over the weekend.

References:

Harrison T. 2010. Apes among the tangled branches of human origins. Science 327:532-534. doi:10.1126/science.1184703

Reading back through some of my old posts, I came across this comparison illustrating the way that status can trump economic rewards:

Consider the rewards that come with being the best-dressed Dr. Frank-N-Furter at the local Rocky Horror Picture Show revival. Or that come along with the publication of an academic book.

So true, so true.

Website review: Learn.Genetics

This week's Science is featuring an essay by the first winners of the "SPORE" competition, the team behind the Learn.Genetics and Teach.Genetics websites. Every month Science is going to recognize an excellent online science learning tool, focused on improving science education. I say, good for them!

The essay (free), by Louisa Stark and Kevin Pompei of the University of Utah's Genetic Science Learning Center, describes all the work that goes into their development of "learning modules":

Our development process for a module begins with a summer workshop, advertised to teachers through our e-mail list. An online application enables us to select an outstanding group of 12 to 18 grade-appropriate teachers who represent a diversity of teaching experience, student populations, and locales; about 5 to 10% of applicants are accepted. Participants receive travel expenses and a stipend.

A typical 4-day summer workshop begins with talks by scientists and discussions of scientific articles, from which participants distill important concepts for their students. The teachers and our staff work together to define the "big ideas" that emerge from these concepts, around which the module will be organized. Small groups of teachers then develop each big idea, drafting online and classroom learning experiences designed to assist students in learning. The workshops offer a rare opportunity for teachers to develop creative ideas for curriculum materials that will be used worldwide, to interact with scientists, to update their content knowledge, and to work with other teachers from across the country. A glimpse into one summer workshop can be seen at http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/epigenetics/credits/. In it, teachers describe ideas that became the Insights From Identical Twins movie and "Gene control" interactive animation on Learn.Genetics and the "DNA and histone model" activity on Teach.Genetics.

After the summer workshop, our team works with the materials the teachers drafted. Ideas may be combined, modified, expanded or contracted, as we plan a module that addresses the big ideas while fitting the anticipated cost within the available budget.

When I read that, I was a little skeptical that this process would result in anything very useful. Sounds too much like "design by committee". And indeed, when you look at the website, at first glance it's visually bland and hard to read. It's arranged in a tabular format, little color, tiny images, and very small text. This would be a tough website for people with sight problems.

But the information in each of the modules is quite good. And in particular, the little animated slideshows are effective in directing attention to a limited number of points. It strikes me as a better way to get the basics across than if they had put the same information into a short text.

For example, I went first into their "Personalized Medicine" module. It has a little section called "Making SNPs Make Sense", which has a little slideshow animation about SNPs, haplotypes and drug reaction animations. The information is all basically correct and appropriately simplified (they illustrate only three-SNP haplotypes and gloss over the idea of population frequencies, for example. The final section, applying an example of drug response to albuterol, makes sense but is speculative -- it would be hard for a student to know which parts are real science and which parts are projection about what might be true in the future. But I think the whole thing was admirably easy to understand, and I would expect students to come away at least knowing the basics of SNPs. Meanwhile, the additional text after the animation uses consistent graphics to give a few more details about SNP discovery and association by linkage.

That's just one example; there are many other online tools here that could be pulled up on classroom computers. I especially like the "Make a Karyotype" exercise -- it's like "Sesame Street" science, and the website provides printable PDFs for this and many other potential in-class exercises. One of the best is "Cell Size and Scale", which has a gives you a zoomable image starting from ordinary objects and scaling down past different single-celled organisms, human cell types, proteins, and all the way down to atoms and molecules. Other parts of the site don't have animated features but are still interesting -- the short article on PTC tasting polymorphisms is a good example.

There could be more links to sites that give further information. The National Library of Medicine Science Primer would be a next logical step for students who wanted to learn more, and there are many others. I continue to think that the text is too small, and that the site should incorporate more narrative elements. Some students will learn about inheritance more effectively by hearing stories about traits in families, not only by watching little cartoon people pass candy necklaces to their cartoon offspring.

Overall I was quite impressed by Learn.Genetics and Teach.Genetics as resources for teachers. Bruce Alberts' editorial promises another site as part of the "SPORE" series each month.

References:

Alberts B. 2010. Science education web sites. Science 327:504. doi:10.1126/science.1187267

Stark LA, Pompei K. 2010. Making genetics easy to understand. Science 327:538-539. doi:10.1126/science.1183029

We control the horizontal

New Scientist has an article by Mark Buchanan discussing horizontal transfer as a mechanism for the evolution of early life: "Horizontal and vertical: The evolution of evolution"

There's a lot of "evolution doesn't work the way we thought" stuff in the article, which focuses on Carl Woese:

How could modern biology have gone so badly off track? According to Woese, it is a simple tale of scientific complacency. Evolutionary biology took its modern form in the early 20th century with the establishment of the genetic basis of inheritance: Mendel's genetics combined with Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection. Biologists refer to this as the "modern synthesis", and it has been the basis for all subsequent developments in molecular biology and genetics. Woese believes that along the way biologists were seduced by their own success into thinking they had found the final truth about all evolution. "Biology built up a facade of mathematics around the juxtaposition of Mendelian genetics with Darwinism," he says. "And as a result it neglected to study the most important problem in science - the nature of the evolutionary process."

In particular, he argues, nothing in the modern synthesis explains the most fundamental steps in early life: how evolution could have produced the genetic code and the basic genetic machinery used by all organisms, especially the enzymes and structures involved in translating genetic information into proteins. Most biologists, following Francis Crick, simply supposed that these were uninformative "accidents of history". That was a big mistake, says Woese, who has made his academic reputation proving the point.

I don't see any inconsistency between the modern synthesis and the idea of horizontal gene transfer. This is a failure of history -- of people reading only Ernst Mayr as a representative of the synthetic view. Other voices -- especially Stebbins -- emphasized gene transfer. The dynamics of genes themselves, as opposed to genes as mere parts of organisms, surely underlie the next generations of evolutionary theoriests, including Dawkins' gene-centric perspective, and Williams' idea of "levels of selection".

Woese is working to discover modes of evolution of gene (and even sub-gene) replicators, before the "hardening" of genomes into organisms. Before the organismal level of selection existed, there can only have been the gene level (taking "gene" to mean replicating element). That's not anti-synthesis, it's what we would expect of replicators at the sub-organismal level.

It's also no surprise as applied to horizontal transfer in more recent lineages. Humans have gotten DNA from viruses during the past few million years, some of which has been fixed in the genomes of the present population. That's no challenge to the way we understand evolution, it's saying that one kind of mutational process is acquisition of viral DNA. Likewise, the introgression of genes between species is no challenge to evolution. It is good evidence that speciation is a evolutionary process -- otherwise boundaries between sister species would be impermeable.

I tell my students almost every semester that I can't give them all high grades because the university demands its pound of flesh. Well, now I find out that this semester starts with a local exposé on grade inflation at UW:

If grades are any indication of on-the-job proficiency, the students graduating from UW-Madison’s department of curriculum and instruction should be very, very good teachers.

According to a Capital Times analysis of publicly available grade information at UW-Madison, the average grade awarded to undergraduates in this department — which develops the teachers of tomorrow — is higher than a 3.9 on a 4.0 scale.

There's nothing surprising about grade inflation. Universities treat students as customers, and like any service industry the universities profit by meeting expectations. Expectations have changed.

I wonder how long someone will try to justify grade inflation here by the Flynn effect? Ooops:

In fact, some point out the average ACT score of incoming freshmen went from 24.0 in 1988 to 26.8 in 1998 to 28.1 in 2008.

There it is!

There is an hidden disadvantage for students here. A-B-C-D-F grades have become nearly useless as entry gauges for many professions (the article emphasizes nursing and education). That means that employers have to lean more and more on other indicators. Letters of recommendation are more inflated than grades, so they don't help. That brings us to tangible things like internships, standardized test scores, and interviews.

Oh and intangibles. Like nepotism.

Filed under

Here are some links that have been piling up in my browser tabs this week:

NY Times: "Scientists Find a Shared Gene in Dogs With Compulsive Behavior"

Afarensis links the Google Books archive of Darwinism Illustrated by George Romanes (1892).

Julien Riel-Salvatore links a new paper on projectile point dynamics by the Mythbusters.

In the arXiv: "To Understand Congress, Just Watch the Sandpile"

It turns out that the way a particular resolution gains support can be accurately simulated by the avalanches that occur when grains of sand are dropped onto each other to form a pile.

Gene Expression: "Rice, alcohol and genes" reviews evidence for the origin of an adaptive ADH1B variant in China.

The Scholarly Kitchen: "Why Hasn’t Scientific Publishing Been Disrupted Already?"

The Dynamist links to a a 1927 film review of Metropolis by author H. G. Wells. He didn't like the movie:

Torches are Christian, we are asked to suppose; torches are human. Torches have hearts. But electric hand-lamps are wicked, mechanical, heartless things. The bad, bad inventor uses quite a big one.

The Wall Street Journal says that fashion trends are out. Unless you count steampunk. Maybe it's all microtrends now.

Today's sketchbook:

The Old Man of La Chapelle-aux-Saints

This is a reconstruction based on the Old Man of La Chapelle-aux-Saints.

Darwin's mitochondria

I'm always skeptical when pathologists attempt to diagnose the ills of historical figures. Even if there are medical records or abundant attestations of symptoms from contemporary sources, people in the past had different ways of describing the observations that doctors today collect.

But that doesn't stop people from trying. Last month, John Hayman published a paper in the British Medical Journal that claims a new diagnosis for the lifelong malady that Darwin described in his own journals and correspondence:

Darwin’s symptoms are those of cyclical vomiting syndrome. Although this is primarily a disease of children it may persist into adulthood or may appear for the first time in adulthood. The disease is related to classic migraine and abdominal migraine but is also linked to abnormalities of mitochondrial DNA, with mutations in the MTTL1 gene. This disease is neither well known nor well recognised, particularly in adults, although it was first described in the English literature in 1882.

People with cyclical vomiting syndrome experience abdominal, circulatory, and cerebral symptoms, including headaches and anxiety. Symptoms overlap with those of classic and abdominal migraine, except for a lack of aura. Affected people may experience some or all of these symptoms, with each individual having similar symptoms with each episode. Over time, however, progression or change may occur in the most prominent feature, and episodes may coalesce. Many people report severe motion sickness, and this may be associated with a full episode.

It seems plausible enough, as much so as any retrospective diagnosis could probably be. It bears all the drawbacks of other attempts to diagnose historical figures.

A test of the hypothesis: mtDNA is maternally inherited and haploid, so symptoms are very likely to be shared by maternal relatives:

Darwin’s mother Susannah died with abdominal pain when he was 8. As a child she had vomiting and boils, experienced motion sickness, had excessive sickness during pregnancies, and "was never quite well." Her younger brother Tom had similar symptoms, with headaches, abdominal pains, and motion sickness. A sister, Sarah, considered that Charles and his uncle Tom had the same illness. Evidence of a matrilineal inheritance pattern is good, consistent with an abnormality of mitochondrial DNA.

It's a sad thing to affect a family.

Mitochondrial disorders are increasingly recognized as causes of chronic disease -- just the other day, a new study implicated defective mitochondria as causes of Parkinson's Disease. I think it's hilarious because there is a cadre of geneticists who depend on the notion that mtDNA is a neutral marker of population history.

Darwin's DNA has nothing to say about whether it was neutral on an evolutionary timescale, but every famous mtDNA functional mutation reminds us that there is biological function there, which is a target of selection under some circumstances.

(via Why Evolution Is True)

References:

Hayman JA. 2009. Darwin's illness revisited. Br Med J 339:b4968. doi:10.1136/bmj.b4968

Filed under

Matthew Cobb wrote recently about olfactory receptor evolution in primates: "You smell like a chimp.. and like a marmoset".

This figure shows how many of those 550-odd genes each species has lost over the last 48 MY or so (in the white bar on the right). Probable gene duplications are shown with a plus sign on the right of the bars, followed by the total number of functional ORs for each species. The number of genes that were lost at each branching event in our evolutionary tree are shown on the left. Strikingly, the same number OR genes were lost at the point we split with the strepsirhines (51 – arrowhead) and when we and the chimps split from the orangutans.

It's really inconvenient that we can't predict what these receptors detect from their sequence.

Filed under

Why are babies shrinking?

For the past twenty years, there's been a rapid secular trend toward lower birth weight in the U.S.

Between 1990 and 2005, the birth weight of full-term babies in the U.S. declined nearly two ounces to an average of 7 pounds, 7.54 ounces, a reversal of a trend that had seen birth weights climb steadily since the 1950s, according to the study. Babies were also born 2.5 days earlier on average in 2005 than in 1990, the study said.

Two of our kids would be in this sample -- the twins are excluded as multiple births. So I'm interested.

The lower-birth-weight trend couldn't be explained by common factors such as how much weight mothers gained during pregnancy, whether the delivery was induced or by cesarean section, the amount of prenatal care, or maternal-health issues such as smoking and hypertension, researchers said. Only babies born at between 37 weeks and 41 weeks of gestation, which doctors consider full term, were studied.

Researchers repeated their analysis in a sample of low-risk women—healthy, educated Caucasians in their mid-to-late 20s—and found that the decrease in birth weight was even more pronounced, suggesting that the trend wasn't the result of changes in the population of mothers.

My candidate is pregnancy tests. Women now know with much greater accuracy their gestational age, which affects the composition of the sample here. Most of the decline in birth weight happened between 2000 and 2005 (between Sophie and Goodwin!) in the U.S. sample. That coincides with a real rise in early ultrasound and super-early pregnancy detection home kits.

If I'm right, the decline is just an artifact of reducing the noise between 40 and 42 weeks. Fetal weight gain in the last few weeks is around a quarter pound a week. I don't think reducing uncertainty about high-gestational-age births would account for the whole decline, but it could explain a large fraction of it.

Straightening the calibration curve

Michael Balter reports on a new radiocarbon calibration called INTCAL09. The calibration curve purports to provide a calendar age calibration up to 50,000 years ago for AMS radiocarbon dates.

Balter's report gives a good account of the basics. The atmospheric concentration of carbon-14 varied over time, so that organisms from some ancient times started with a higher proportion and other times started with a lower proportion. The radiocarbon dating technique depends on knowing this initial carbon-14 proportion. But we can only figure this out by comparing the present carbon-14 proportion in things whose ages we know -- like tree rings. Before 25,000 years ago, good non-radiocarbon chronologies are hard to come by, so up to now there has been no good calibration curve.

More recently, however, thanks to new and more accurate data from foraminifers, corals, and other sources--plus some fancy statistical treatments that help predict which way data gaps bend the curve--the INTCAL group has been able to resolve most of the discrepancies. "It took the group quite a while to come together and agree," says INTCAL team leader Paula Reimer, a geochronologist at Queen's University Belfast in Northern Ireland. But the new data, combined with what Reimer calls a "real sense of necessity" among team members to resolve the debates, won the day.

I'm skeptical when I see calibrated dates because they seldom report the calibration error. I like "fancy statistical treatments" that actually report their error. The entire reason a calibration model like INTCAL09 looks good is that it represents only one component of variability within a large set of separate chronometric datasets. The "debates" are more or less about whether that component is time, and if not what other factors must be controlled. Resolving the debates doesn't mean that the model will reduce the error associated with calibrating a given date -- it (hopefully) means that calibrated dates will be unbiased.

In principle, calibration is good because it facilitates comparison between radiocarbon and other dating methods, like OSL or ESR. It also gives a more accurate view of the temporal scale of events -- the radiocarbon chronology compresses the period between 40,000 and 10,000 years ago into 25,000 radiocarbon years instead of 30,000 calendar years. It makes a difference, if for no other reason, because it makes the initial Upper Paleolithic look more rapid than it really was.

Julien Riel-Salvatore ruminates on similar issues ("Paleolithic radiocarbon legerdemain")

The really bad dating problem happens at points where the atmospheric carbon-14 declined. Some declines occurred with nearly the same rate as actual decay of the carbon-14. A younger sample may then up with the same carbon-14 proportion as an older sample, with no way to tell between them. (I discussed this problem as applied to initial Upper Paleolithic-era dates in "Radiocarbon fudgery".)

Because different datasets vary in their results, apparent declines in atmospheric carbon-14 seem more common in those individual datasets than in the model that reflects their common features. The atmospheric carbon should be better reflected by the model -- after all, there's only one atmosphere, so these datasets should reflect the same value.

But any single series of dates ought to have temporal stochasticity more like an individual dataset. When we take dates from bone collagen -- which is not one of the kinds of data with chronological controls -- there ought to be a separate, source-specific error that we can't control by a calibration model.

Does it matter? I think we should assume the resolution of a 40,000-year-old calibrated radiocarbon date is no better than 3000 years. And in some cases more -- depending on the atmospheric trend. If one date is 3000 years earlier than the other, I think there's a very good likelihood that the earlier date really did happen first.

Too conservative? I'd like to see somebody run the numbers on it.

I was just talking in class today about how people want to back-breed aurochsen out of extinction. Here's a new story about the idea, from the Telegraph:

"We were able to analyse auroch DNA from preserved bone material and create a rough map of its genome that should allow us to breed animals nearly identical to aurochs," said team leader Donato Matassino, head of the Consortium for Experimental Biotechnology in Benevento, in the southern Campania region.

"We've already made our first round of crosses between three breeds native to Britain, Spain and Italy. Now we just have to wait and see how the calves turn out."

I noted the idea last year:

But I wouldn't rule out the possibility of back-breeding the genetics to look reasonably like some wild aurochsen. Old breeds were selected for diverse things, but most of this selection would have used standing variation initially. Few new mutations would have fixed in the time since domestication, and if one fixed in a single breed, it would have been unlikely to have been introduced into other old breeds until recently.

Syndicate content