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1 May 2001 QUANTIFYING PASSIVE AND DRIVEN LARGE-SCALE EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS
Steve C. Wang
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Abstract

I introduce a new statistical method, analysis of skewness, for quantifying large-scale evolutionary trends as a combination of both passive and driven trends. My approach is based on the skewness of subclades within a parent clade. I partition the total skewness of the parent clade into three components: (1) skewness between subclades; (2) skewness within subclades; and (3) skewness due to changes in variance among subclades. The third component corresponds to a new type of passive trend, in which overall skewness of a parent clade is due to greater variability in subclades to the right of the mean. Using this partitioning, I decompose an observed trend into two components: a driven portion and a passive portion, thus quantifying the effect of small-scale dynamics on large-scale behavior of clades. Applications are given to Miocene-Pliocene rodent size and Ordovician brachiopod muscle geometry.

Corresponding Editor: M. Zelditch

Steve C. Wang "QUANTIFYING PASSIVE AND DRIVEN LARGE-SCALE EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS," Evolution 55(5), 849-858, (1 May 2001). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2001)055[0849:QPADLS]2.0.CO;2
Received: 22 August 2000; Accepted: 1 December 2000; Published: 1 May 2001
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KEYWORDS
Analysis of skewness
driven trend
evolutionary trends
macroevolution
passive trend
subclade test
trend partitioning
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