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Evolutionary biology hypothesis
Evolutionary capacitance is the storage and release of variation, just as electrical capacitors store and release charge. Living systems are robust to
Evolutionary_capacitance
(evolution) – evidence of common descent – evolution – evolutionary arms race – evolutionary capacitance Evolution: of ageing – of the brain – of cetaceans
Index of evolutionary biology articles
Index_of_evolutionary_biology_articles
Measure of the ability of a population to produce the same phenotype
otherwise be deleterious. Genetic canalisation could allow for evolutionary capacitance, where genetic diversity accumulates in a population over time
Canalisation_(genetics)
interconvert between [PSI+] and [psi-](prion-free) states provides an evolutionary advantage, but this remains an area of much debate. Susan Lindquist has
Sup35p
Overview of and topical guide to change in the heritable characteristics of organisms
reproduction Evolutionary arms race – Concept in Evolution Evolutionary capacitance – Evolutionary biology hypothesis Evolutionary fauna Evolutionary pressure –
Outline_of_evolution
Theory in evolutionary biology
Convergent evolution Court Jester Hypothesis Critical juncture theory Evolutionary capacitance Gene orders Koinophilia Punctuated equilibrium in social theory
Punctuated_equilibrium
Persistence of a biological trait under uncertain conditions
variation with high evolutionary potential. Evolvability may be high when robustness is reversible, with evolutionary capacitance allowing a switch between
Robustness_(evolution)
Capacity of a system for adaptive evolution
be an example of the evolution of evolvability through evolutionary capacitance. An evolutionary capacitor is a switch that turns genetic variation on
Evolvability
Heat shock proteins with a molecular mass around 90kDa
origin of the eukaryotic cell and of the endoplasmic reticulum. Evolutionary capacitance Hsp90 cis-regulatory element PDB: 2CG9; Ali MM, Roe SM, Vaughan
Hsp90
challenges are listed below: Receiver circuits and low-capacitance integration of photodetectors Evolutionary improvement in optoelectronic devices Absence of
Optical_interconnect
Device that converts sound into an electrical signal
Because the capacitance of the plates is inversely proportional to the distance between them, the vibrations produce changes in capacitance. These changes
Microphone
(1996). "Does Evolutionary Plasticity Evolve?", Evolution, 50(3):1008-1023. Bergman A and Siegal ML (2003). "Evolutionary capacitance as a general feature
Wagner's_gene_network_model
Chemical compound naturally occurring as periclase
surfcoat.2024.130819. Yu, Fangzhou; Hong, Wen (2021). "MgZnO-Based Negative Capacitance Transparent Thin-Film Transistor Built on Glass". IEEE Journal of the
Magnesium_oxide
Biological electricity-related abilities
fish can discriminate between objects with different resistance and capacitance values, which may help in identifying objects. Active electroreception
Electroreception and electrogenesis
Electroreception_and_electrogenesis
Neuron communication by electric impulses
time-scale τ increases with both the membrane resistance rm and capacitance cm. As the capacitance increases, more charge must be transferred to produce a given
Action_potential
Brain of birds
receptors, ion channels, and mitochondria, while possessing lower membrane capacitance, meaning membrane potential requires less energy to change. A smaller
Avian_brain
Subset of artificial intelligence
"Image reconstruction using machine-learned pseudoinverse in electrical capacitance tomography". Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence. 142
Machine_learning
Interdisciplinary science
acidification of the tumor microenvironment and the difference in membrane capacitance. CTCs are isolated from blood by a microfluidic device, and are cultured
Microfluidics
Connection between brain and computer
microvolts is the fact that the electrode-tissue interface has a high capacitance at small voltages. Due to the nature of these small signals, for BCI
Brain–computer_interface
Equipment used in induction heating
The basic elements of the circuit are an inductance (tank coil) and a capacitance (tank capacitor) and an oscillator valve. Basic electrical principles
Induction_heater
Concentration of water vapour in the air
on-line measurements, the most commonly used sensors nowadays are based on capacitance measurements to measure relative humidity, frequently with internal conversions
Humidity
Earth, a natural material
expressed in terms of volume or weight—can be based on in situ probes (e.g., capacitance probes, neutron probes), or remote sensing methods. Soil moisture measurement
Soil
Luhmann, J. G.; Johnson, R. E.; Zhang, M. H. G. (3 November 1992). "Evolutionary impact of sputtering of the Martian atmosphere by O + pickup ions". Geophysical
Earth's_magnetic_field
Computer architecture that can be reprogrammed
is due to the connecting wires being shorter, resulting in less wire capacitance and hence faster and lower power designs. A potential undesirable consequence
Reconfigurable_computing
Subfield of robotics
microfluidic pathways (liquid metal, ionic solution), Piezoelectricity, Capacitance, Magnetic fields, Optical loss, Acoustic loss. These measurements can
Soft_robotics
Adaptations of marine vertebrates to diving
response independent of local metabolite induced vasodilation. Venous capacitance is highly developed, especially in phocid seals and whales, and includes
Physiology of underwater diving
Physiology_of_underwater_diving
Pore-forming membrane protein
characteristics from 1987. ... the observation of an inductance (negative capacitance) by Cole and Baker (1941) during measurements of the AC electrical properties
Ion_channel
electro-dynamical variables such as current, conductance or resistance, capacitance and voltage. The Hodgkin–Huxley model, widely regarded as one of the
Models_of_neural_computation
respectively and RK and RNa are the resistances associated with them. C is the capacitance of the membrane and I is the source current, which could be the test
Nervous_system_network_models
anticipation, anticipative, anticipatory, capability, capable, capacious, capacitance, capacitate, capacity, capistrate, capstan, captation, caption, captious
List of Latin verbs with English derivatives
List_of_Latin_verbs_with_English_derivatives
new physical phenomenon could yield transistors with greatly enhanced capacitance – a measure of the voltage required to move a charge. This, in turn,
2011_in_science
Protein-coding gene in mammals
intrinsic voltage-sensing, the movement of ions generates a nonlinear capacitance (NLC). Based upon the generated voltage and the depolarized or hyperpolarized
Prestin
Computational neuroscience model
neuron which means it has a greater capacitance than the excitatory synapsing neuron. This increased capacitance results in a neuron that is slower to
Synthetic_nervous_system
American Physicist
J.; Zagozdzon-Wosik, W. (2011). "Reduction of electrode polarization capacitance in low-frequency impedance spectroscopy by using mesh electrodes". Biosensors
John_H._Miller_Jr.
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Read 1.An early American bearer of the common British name was George Reed who emigrated from England in 1635 with his son, William, and settled in Woburn, MA, several years later. His grandson James (1722–1807), a revolutionary war soldier who distinguished himself at the battle of Bunker Hill, moved to Fitzwilliam, NH, and was one of the original NH proprietors.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for the servant of a parish priest or parson, or a patronymic denoting the child of a parson, from the possessive case of Middle English persone, parsoun (see Parson).English : many early examples are found with prepositions (e.g. Ralph del Persones 1323); these are habitational names, with the omission of house, hence in effect occupational names for servants employed at the parson’s house.Irish : usually of English origin (see above), but sometimes a reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac an Phearsain, which is of Highland Scottish origin (see McPherson).Members of an Irish family called Parsons wre twice created earl of Rosse, first in 1718 and again in 1806. They settled in Ireland c.1590, when two brothers, William and Laurence Parsons, were granted large estates. Birr Castle, Parsonstown, became the family seat. Samuel Holden Parsons, born Lyme, CT, in 1737 was a Connecticut legislator and revolutionary war officer. Theophilius Parsons (1750–1813) was born in Byfield, MA, and was chief justice of the MA supreme court (1806–13); his son, also Theophilius, was a professor at Harvard Law School (1848–1869).
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, and northern Irish
English, Scottish, and northern Irish : variant of Sand 1.Scottish : habitational name from Sands in Tulliallan in Fife.Comfort Sands, a revolutionary patriot born in 1748 at what is now Sands’ Point, Long Island, NY, was descended from James (Sandys) Sands (1622–95), who emigrated from Reading, Berkshire, England, to Plymouth, MA, and followed Anne Hutchinson to Westchester Co., NY, and subsequently RI. In 1661 he settled on Block Island, RI.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : perhaps a deliberate alteration of Leatherhead, a habitational name from Leatherhead in Surrey, which is named from Celtic lēd ‘gray’ + rïd ‘ford’, or alternatively a habitational name from Lythwood in Shropshire, which is named from Old English hlið ‘slope’ + wudu ‘wood’.Zachariah Leatherwood, son of John Leatherwood, was born in Prince William Co., VA, about 1735. After the revolutionary war, he settled in Spartanburg Co., SC, with his second wife, Jane Calvert, and many of his fourteen children.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Old Norse personal name Þorgils, composed of the name of the Norse god of thunder, Þorr + gils ‘hostage’, ‘pledge’. However, the inorganic initial s- is not easily explained; it may be the result of Old French influence.Edward Sturgis of England settled in Charlestown in 1634 and moved to Yarmouth, MA, in 1638. His descendants included a revolutionary war soldier and Cape Cod shipmaster, and a Massachusetts legislator.
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, and northern Irish
English, Scottish, and northern Irish : habitational name from any of several places in England and Scotland, variously spelled, that are named with Old English cald ‘cold’ + well(a) ‘spring’, ‘stream’. Caldwell in North Yorkshire is one major source of the surname; Caldwell in Renfrewshire in Scotland another.Several Caldwells emigrated from Scotland to America by way of Ireland in the 18th century. James Caldwell (1734–81), son of settler John Caldwell, was born in Charlotte Co., VA, and was a militant clergyman during the revolutionary war. Andrew Caldwell, a Scottish farmer, emigrated to America in 1718 and started a family in Lancaster Co., PA. His son David was a Presbyterian clergyman and well-known revolutionary war patriot.
Surname or Lastname
English (also well established in South Wales)
English (also well established in South Wales) : topographic name for someone who lived in a nook or hollow, from Old English and Middle English hale, dative of h(e)alh ‘nook’, ‘hollow’. In northern England the word often has a specialized meaning, denoting a piece of flat alluvial land by the side of a river, typically one deposited in a bend. In southeastern England it often referred to a patch of dry land in a fen. In some cases the surname may be a habitational name from any of the several places in England named with this fossilized inflected form, which would originally have been preceded by a preposition, e.g. in the hale or at the hale.English : from a Middle English personal name derived from either of two Old English bynames, Hæle ‘hero’ or Hægel, which is probably akin to Germanic Hagano ‘hawthorn’ (see Hain 2).Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Céile (see McHale).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant spelling of Halle.Robert Hale, who settled in Cambridge, MA, in 1632, was an ancestor of the revolutionary war patriot and spy Nathan Hale (1755–76) of CT. The common English surname was brought independently in the 17th century to VA and MD.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : topographic name for someone who lived by a bush or hedge of hawthorn (Old English haguþorn, hægþorn, i.e. thorn used for making hedges and enclosures, Old English haga, (ge)hæg), or a habitational name from a place named with this word, such as Hawthorn in County Durham. In Scotland the surname originated in the Durham place name, and from Scotland it was taken to Ireland. This spelling is now found primarily in northern Ireland.The American novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804–64) was a direct descendant of Major William Hathorne, one of the English Puritans who settled in MA in 1630, and whose son John Hathorne was one of the judges in the Salem witchcraft trials. The writer’s father was a sea captain, as was his grandfather, the revolutionary war hero Daniel Hathorne (1731–96). The spelling of the surname was altered by the novelist.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Hain 1–3.Isaac Hayne (1745–81) was an American revolutionary militia officer, executed by the British for breaking parole. He owned an ironworks and was manufacturing ammunition for the American forces when he was caught. His grandfather had emigrated from England to SC in about 1700.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Old English clǣg ‘clay’, applied as a topographic name for someone who lived in an area of clay soil or as a metonymic occupational name for a worker in a clay pit (see Clayman).Americanized spelling of German Klee.The relatively common English name Clay had several American forebears in the 18th century. Henry Clay, born in Hanover, VA, in 1777, secretary of state for President John Quincy Adams, was descended from English ancestors who came to VA shortly after the founding of Jamestown. The revolutionary war officer Joseph Clay, also a member of the Continental Congress, was a native of Yorkshire, England, who emigrated to GA in 1760 and was a founder of the University of Georgia.
Surname or Lastname
English and Dutch
English and Dutch : from the personal name (Greek Nikolaos, from nikÄn ‘to conquer’ + laos ‘people’). Forms with -ch- are due to hypercorrection (compare Anthony). The name in various vernacular forms was popular among Christians throughout Europe in the Middle Ages, largely as a result of the fame of a 4th-century Lycian bishop, about whom a large number of legends grew up, and who was venerated in the Orthodox Church as well as the Catholic. In English-speaking countries, this surname is also found as an Americanized form of various Greek surnames such as Papanikolaou ‘(son of) Nicholas the priest’ and patronymics such as Nikolopoulos.The colonial official and revolutionary patriot Robert Carter Nicholas was from a prominent VA family on both sides. His father was a British navy surgeon who emigrated in about 1700 from Lancashire, England, to Williamsburg, VA.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from either of two places, in Hertfordshire and Surrey, called Puttenham, from the genitive case of the Old English byname Putta, meaning ‘kite’ (the bird) + Old English hÄm ‘homestead’.John Putnam emigrated from England to Salem, MA, before 1641, and established a family that was still prominent in Massachusetts four generations later, including the revolutionary war soldier Israel Putnam (1718–90) and his cousin Rufus Putnam (1738–1824), also a soldier, one of the first settlers in OH.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.John Mifflin (born 1640) came to Delaware from Warminster, Wiltshire, England, in the 1670s. He is probably the same person as the John Mifflin, a Quaker, who built his home, ‘Fountain Green’, in Fairmont Park, Philadelphia, in 1679. His fourth-generation descendant Thomas Mifflin (1744–1800) was a member of the Continental Congress, a revolutionary soldier, and governor of PA.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the places so called, in southwestern Lancashire (now Merseyside), Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Shropshire, and Devon, all of which are named from Old English prēost ‘priest’ + cot ‘cottage’, ‘dwelling’. The surname is most common in Lancashire, and so it seems likely that the first of these places is the most frequent source. It is also present in Ireland, being recorded there first in the 15th century.John Prescott of Standish, Lancaster, England, arrived in New England in 1640 and in 1643 was one of the first settlers of Lancaster, MA. His descendants include several prominent Americans of the revolutionary war, including Samuel Prescott, born in Concord, MA, in 1751, whose fame lies in completing the midnight ride of warning in 1775 after Paul Revere was captured.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a copse or thicket, Middle English s(c)hage, s(c)hawe (Old English sceaga), or a habitational name from any of the numerous minor places named with this word. The English surname was also established in Ireland in the 17th century.Scottish and Irish : adopted as an English form of any of various Gaelic surnames derived from the personal name Sitheach ‘wolf’.Americanized form of some like-sounding Ashkenazic Jewish surname.Chinese : variant of Shao.Early American merchants and revolutionary patriots were Nathaniel Shaw (b. 1735 in New London, CT) and Samuel Shaw (b. 1754 in Boston).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : patronymic or metronymic from Eade.The inventor Thomas Alva Edison, born in 1847 in Milan, OH, came from a Canadian family first established in North America by John Edison, a loyalist during the American Revolution, who served under the British General Richard Howe and went into exile in Nova Scotia after the Revolutionary War.
Boy/Male
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi
Couregeous; Revolutionary; Drifting about; Revolution
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
Girl/Female
Hindu
Goddess Lakshmi
Boy/Male
Indian, Kannada, Marathi, Tamil
Bright Wisdom
Surname or Lastname
English (chiefly Lancashire and Yorkshire)
English (chiefly Lancashire and Yorkshire) : from a medieval personal name, composed of the elements Will 1 + the hypocoristic suffix -cok (see Cocke).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Lincolnshire, so called from the genitive case of the Old English byname FÅt, meaning ‘foot’ (or the Old Norse cognate Fótr), + Old English dÄ«c ‘ditch’, ‘dike’ (see Ditch).
Boy/Male
Indian
Imperishable, A name of Lord Vishnu, Indestructible
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
A nabee was named by this name
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Virtuous Love
Girl/Female
Russian
royal.
Girl/Female
Indian
Heaven, Paradise
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Given by Lord Shiva
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
EVOLUTIONARY CAPACITANCE
n.
One of the notes, bills, or bonds, issued as currency by the revolutionary government of France (1790-1796), and based on the security of the lands of the church and of nobles which had been appropriated by the state.
n.
One of the marauders who, in the Revolutionary War infested the neutral ground between the American and British lines, and committed depredations on the Americans.
n.
One who desires to maintain existing institutions and customs; also, one who holds moderate opinions in politics; -- opposed to revolutionary or radical.
a.
Pertaining to elocution.
a.
Relating to evolution; as, evolutionary discussions.
n.
The delivery before an audience of something committed to memory, especially as an elocutionary exhibition; also, that which is so delivered.
a.
Of or pertaining to a revolution in government; tending to, or promoting, revolution; as, revolutionary war; revolutionary measures; revolutionary agitators.
n.
One who governs by terrorism or intimidation; specifically, an agent or partisan of the revolutionary tribunal during the Reign of Terror in France.
n.
The designation of a body of Maryland soldiers in the Revolutionary War, distinguished by a rich uniform.
a.
Relating to evolution.
n.
The state of being in revolution; revolutionary doctrines or principles.
n.
A game at cards, played by four persons, with two packs of fifty-two cards each; -- said to be so called from Boston, Massachusetts, and to have been invented by officers of the French army in America during the Revolutionary war.
n.
A person clothed in buckskin, particularly an American soldier of the Revolutionary war.
n.
A revolutionist.
n.
A theory or system of social reform which contemplates a complete reconstruction of society, with a more just and equitable distribution of property and labor. In popular usage, the term is often employed to indicate any lawless, revolutionary social scheme. See Communism, Fourierism, Saint-Simonianism, forms of socialism.
a.
Pertaining to, or involving, sans-culottism; radical; revolutionary; Jacobinical.
a.
Of or pertaining to the confederated colonies collectively, in the time of the Revolutionary War; as, Continental money.
a.
Of or pertaining to the Jacobins of France; revolutionary; of the nature of, or characterized by, Jacobinism.