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  2. Dominant Species (board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominant_Species_(board_game)

    The New Scientist have listed Dominant Species as one of the "9 of the best board games to play for fans of science and tech". [14] According to Andrew Smith: Dominant Species can be a mean, frustrating game of survival of fittest. But the game mechanisms are extremely streamlined, easy to teach, and fairly intuitive to understand. [6]

  3. Dominator (graph theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominator_(graph_theory)

    The dominance frontier of a node d is the set of all nodes n i such that d dominates an immediate predecessor of n i, but d does not strictly dominate n i. It is the set of nodes where d 's dominance stops. A dominator tree is a tree where each node's children are those nodes it immediately dominates. The start node is the root of the tree.

  4. List of phylogenetic tree visualization software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_phylogenetic_tree...

    interactive phylogenetic tree visualization with numerical annotation graphs, with SVG or PNG output, implemented in D3.js [44] phylotree.js Javascript phylotree.js is a library that extends the popular data visualization framework D3.js, and is suitable for building JavaScript applications where users can view and interact with phylogenetic trees

  5. Biological data visualization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_data_visualization

    The dominant signal intensities of T 2 image weighting are fluid (white), muscle (grey), and fat (white). T 2 signals are also often emphasized or suppressed depending on what the goal of the imaging is; notable examples include fat suppression, fluid attenuation, and susceptibility weighting.

  6. Evolutionary game theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_game_theory

    Evolutionary game theory analyses Darwinian mechanisms with a system model with three main components – population, game, and replicator dynamics. The system process has four phases: 1) The model (as evolution itself) deals with a population (Pn). The population will exhibit variation among competing individuals. In the model this competition ...

  7. Directional selection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directional_selection

    Three different types of genetic selection. On each graph, the x-axis variable is the type of phenotypic trait and the y-axis variable is the amount of organisms. Group A is the original population and Group B is the population after selection. Top (Graph 1) represents directional selection with one extreme favored.

  8. Punnett square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punnett_square

    The following example illustrates a dihybrid cross between two double-heterozygote pea plants. R represents the dominant allele for shape (round), while r represents the recessive allele (wrinkled). A represents the dominant allele for color (yellow), while a represents the recessive allele (green).

  9. Dominance (genetics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominance_(genetics)

    Autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive inheritance, the two most common Mendelian inheritance patterns. An autosome is any chromosome other than a sex chromosome.. In genetics, dominance is the phenomenon of one variant of a gene on a chromosome masking or overriding the effect of a different variant of the same gene on the other copy of the chromosome.