Sentence examples for ubiquitous selection from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

However a role of pvmdr1 in modulating chloroquine susceptibility is supported by the almost ubiquitous selection of the Y976F allele in Papua, where high grade chloroquine resistance is known to predominate.

This conclusion is consistent with other existing evidence for ubiquitous selection in A/H3N2 populations (Bhatt et al., 2011; Strelkowa and Lässig, 2012).

Here, we investigate how a ubiquitous selection pressure, predation, affects selection for cooperation in the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which cooperates by secreting and responding to quorum sensing (QS) signal molecules in the surrounding environment [ 4].

Similar(57)

Sequence divergence was also characterised by ubiquitous purifying selection, frequent rate asymmetry between paralogs and occasional positive selection, which nonetheless occurred significantly more often among duplicates than single-copy genes.

It's anyone's guess how it evolved into this ubiquitous tapa selection in Christian Spain.

Our work lends strong support to an emerging view that hierarchical suppression is a ubiquitous action selection mechanism, whether it is used in deciding among available behavioral choices, or selecting movements performed in complex serial tasks.

Above results and documentations on gregarious settlement in other marine taxa bring us to suggest that the 'group level' of kin aggregates may serve as a ubiquitous legitimate selection entity in the evolution of a sessile mode of life in marine organisms.

Although purifying selection was ubiquitous, FEL and REL tests detected 12 and 41 positively-selected codons respectively among both singleton loci and retained paralogs.

It is a willing subject -- nearly as expressive as the human face and probably easier to photogarph for all concerned -- and so ubiquitous that a decent selection of hands can encompass a good bit of the medium's history.

Tradeoffs, or compromises, are ubiquitous in evolution, as selection that favors one trait is often at the expense of another.

This is often justified on the grounds that there exists a "good fit" between the trait and its current function (Maynard Smith 1978) or that natural selection is ubiquitous in nature (Mayr 1983).

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