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arxiv: 1707.05317 · v2 · pith:3FAQNGUAnew · submitted 2017-07-17 · 🧬 q-bio.PE · cond-mat.stat-mech

Natural selection as coarsening

classification 🧬 q-bio.PE cond-mat.stat-mech
keywords evolutionarycoarseningdynamicsnaturalselectionevolutionphysicsstatistical
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Analogies between evolutionary dynamics and statistical mechanics, such as Fisher's second-law-like "fundamental theorem of natural selection" and Wright's "fitness landscapes", have had a deep and fruitful influence on the development of evolutionary theory. Here I discuss a new conceptual link between evolution and statistical physics. I argue that natural selection can be viewed as a coarsening phenomenon, similar to the growth of domain size in quenched magnets or to Ostwald ripening in alloys and emulsions. In particular, I show that the most remarkable features of coarsening---scaling and self-similarity---have strict equivalents in evolutionary dynamics. This analogy has three main virtues: it brings a set of well-developed mathematical tools to bear on evolutionary dynamics; it suggests new problems in theoretical evolution; and it provides coarsening physics with a new exactly soluble model.

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