| Literature DB >> 24727286 |
Russell B Myers1, Brandon Millman2, Mohamed A F Noor3.
Abstract
Students in college courses struggle to understand many concepts fundamental to transmission and evolutionary genetics, including multilocus inheritance, recombination, Hardy-Weinberg, and genetic drift. These students consistently ask for more demonstrations and more practice problems. With this demand in mind, the "Genetics and Evolution" app was designed to help students (and their instructors) by providing a suite of tools granting them the ability to: (1) simulate genetic crosses with varying numbers of genes and patterns of inheritance, (2) simulate allele frequency changes under natural selection and/ or genetic drift, (3) quiz themselves to reinforce terminology (customizable by any instructor for their whole classroom), *4) solve various problems (recombination fractions, Hardy-Weinberg, heritability, population growth), and (5) generate literally an infinite number of practice problems in all of these areas to try on their own. Although some of these functions are available elsewhere, the alternatives do not have the ability to instantly generate new practice problems or achieve these diverse functions in devices that students carry in their pockets every day.Entities:
Keywords: app; education; simulations; terminology
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24727286 PMCID: PMC4025476 DOI: 10.1534/g3.114.010215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 1Example of “cross simulator” feature showing products from a dihybrid cross. In this case, the “Show Phenotypes” option is selected, so offspring phenotypes are depicted rather than genotypes both individually and in the overall ratios presented on the lower right side.
Figure 2Example of the “Allele Freak” feature depicting allele frequency changes (of “a”) across 250 generations in four populations of size 50, in all of which the genotype “aa” has a slight fitness deficit. This particular example demonstrates how strong genetic drift can sometimes overpower weak natural selection: an overall trend is apparent, but there are outliers.
Sample activities/ learning outcomes facilitated with “Allele Freak” feature
| • Contrast spread of dominant |
| • Calculate or verify predicted equilibrium allele frequencies under heterozygote advantage and heterozygote disadvantage |
| • Contrast effects of genetic drift with varying population sizes |
| • Identify likelihood of “eventual” fixation of allele via genetic drift and observe that it is predicted by starting allele frequency |
| • Explore spread/loss of rare beneficial allele in finite population, varying dominance |
| • Explore effect of inbreeding on speed of loss of detrimental recessive mutation |