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Mass extinctions can accelerate evolution?

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biped robot/Joel Lehman

In robots.

From ScienceDaily:

A computer science team at The University of Texas at Austin has found that robots evolve more quickly and efficiently after a virtual mass extinction modeled after real-life disasters such as the one that killed off the dinosaurs. Beyond its implications for artificial intelligence, the research supports the idea that mass extinctions actually speed up evolution by unleashing new creativity in adaptations.

“Focused destruction can lead to surprising outcomes,” said Miikkulainen, a professor of computer science at UT Austin. “Sometimes you have to develop something that seems objectively worse in order to develop the tools you need to get better.”

In biology, mass extinctions are known for being highly destructive, erasing a lot of genetic material from the tree of life. But some evolutionary biologists hypothesize that extinction events actually accelerate evolution by promoting those lineages that are the most evolvable, meaning ones that can quickly create useful new features and abilities.

Miikkulainen and Lehman found that, at least with robots, this is the case. More.

So the idea seems to be that Darwinian evolution can work with mass destruction to create new information by a process of random mass elimination:

After hundreds of generations, a wide range of robotic behaviors had evolved to fill these niches, many of which were not directly useful for walking. Then the researchers randomly killed off the robots in 90 percent of the niches, mimicking a mass extinction.

After several such cycles of evolution and extinction, they discovered that the lineages that survived were the most evolvable and, therefore, had the greatest potential to produce new behaviors. Not only that, but overall, better solutions to the task of walking were evolved in simulations with mass extinctions, compared with simulations without them.

Nietzsche’s robot?

Might work for robots, but not sure how well it would work in nature. In nature, survivability depends, among other things, on an ecology. No doubt, many fit species were doomed because other less fit species were one of the supports of a then-collapsing ecology. Thoughts?

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Comments
daveS @5, You love picking on YECs, don't you? Why don't you grow a pair and pick on someone your size? Until then, you're just a wuss.Mapou
August 16, 2015
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Meh. Pathetic little toy stuff. What they always forget to say is that you can accelerate evolution a trillion times and it will never get you anything more complex than simple toy-like entities. Consider that the number of particles in the visible universe is estimated to be 10^85, a very big number. But this number pales in comparison to the the size of the search space that is required to arrive at the human genome. It is greater than 4^(2 billion). The combinatorial explosion kills all stochastic search algorithms (e.g., RM+NS) dead. No computer simulation can come close to simulating anything more complex than pathetic little toy creatures like Lehman's biped robots. This is not science, folks. This is a bunch of grown up nerds playing in their toy box. Every time they notice something different, they get excited and yell "Look Ma, we are simulating evolution." Karl Popper was fond of saying that Darwinian evolution was a metaphysical research project. Popper was being kind. All Lehman has is a bunch of chicken shit little toys in a nerd sandbox. ahahaha...AHAHAHA...ahahaha...Mapou
August 16, 2015
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This is consistent with the YEC account of what happened after the Great Flood, namely superfast microevolution over the last few thousand years:
It is very likely that all the cats we see today (including lions, tigers, leopards, and your house cat) are grandchildren of the two cats that were on Noah's ark.
daveS
August 16, 2015
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All information is not created equal Bb. Consider the story of Noah and how it spread. Went viral. The story of Herb not so much.ppolish
August 16, 2015
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I'm off to church Zachriel, and will reply later.bb
August 16, 2015
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bb: I think claiming mass extinction causes an increase in information is like claiming the destruction of libraries might cause an increase in classic literature. Information is ill-defined in this context. Extinction increases the rate of evolution. One reason is because organisms become highly specialized and adapted for their niches, so the overall ecosystem tends to change only slowly. Mass extinction favors generalists and rapid evolvers.Zachriel
August 16, 2015
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I think claiming mass extinction causes an increase in information is like claiming the destruction of libraries might cause an increase in classic literature.bb
August 16, 2015
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