Auerbach Joshua E, Bongard Josh C
Laboratory of Intelligent Systems, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Computer Science, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, United States of America.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2014 Jan;10(1):e1003399. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003399. Epub 2014 Jan 2.
Whether, when, how, and why increased complexity evolves in biological populations is a longstanding open question. In this work we combine a recently developed method for evolving virtual organisms with an information-theoretic metric of morphological complexity in order to investigate how the complexity of morphologies, which are evolved for locomotion, varies across different environments. We first demonstrate that selection for locomotion results in the evolution of organisms with morphologies that increase in complexity over evolutionary time beyond what would be expected due to random chance. This provides evidence that the increase in complexity observed is a result of a driven rather than a passive trend. In subsequent experiments we demonstrate that morphologies having greater complexity evolve in complex environments, when compared to a simple environment when a cost of complexity is imposed. This suggests that in some niches, evolution may act to complexify the body plans of organisms while in other niches selection favors simpler body plans.
生物种群中复杂性增加是在何时、如何以及为何发生的,这是一个长期存在的开放性问题。在这项工作中,我们将一种最近开发的用于进化虚拟生物的方法与形态复杂性的信息论度量相结合,以研究为运动而进化的形态复杂性如何在不同环境中变化。我们首先证明,对运动的选择导致生物体形态的进化,其复杂性在进化时间内增加,超出了随机情况下预期的水平。这提供了证据,表明观察到的复杂性增加是由驱动趋势而非被动趋势导致的。在后续实验中,我们证明,与施加复杂性成本的简单环境相比,具有更高复杂性的形态在复杂环境中进化。这表明,在某些生态位中,进化可能会使生物体的身体结构复杂化,而在其他生态位中,选择则有利于更简单的身体结构。