How morphological development can guide evolution

11/20/2017
by   Sam Kriegman, et al.
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Organisms result from multiple adaptive processes occurring and interacting at different time scales. One such interaction is that between development and evolution. In modeling studies, it has been shown that development sweeps over a series of traits in a single agent, and sometimes exposes promising static traits. Subsequent evolution can then canalize these rare traits. Thus, development can, under the right conditions, increase evolvability. Here, we report on a previously unknown phenomenon when embodied agents are allowed to develop and evolve: Evolution discovers body plans which are robust to control changes, these body plans become genetically assimilated, yet controllers for these agents are not assimilated. This allows evolution to continue climbing fitness gradients by tinkering with the developmental programs for controllers within these permissive body plans. This exposes a previously unknown detail about the Baldwin effect: instead of all useful traits becoming genetically assimilated, only phenotypic traits that render the agent robust to changes in other traits become assimilated. We refer to this phenomenon as differential canalization. This finding also has important implications for the evolutionary design of artificial and embodied agents such as robots: robots that are robust to internal changes in their controllers may also be robust to external changes in their environment, such as transferal from simulation to reality, or deployment in novel environments.

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