Dear Dr. Qwerty,
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CALL FOR COMMENTATORS
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Below is a link to the forthcoming BBS target article
"Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders:
Which evolutionarygenetic models work best?"
by Matthew C. Keller and Geoffrey Miller
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
Sciences (BBS), an international, interdisciplinary journal providing Open
Peer Commentary on important and controversial current research in the
biobehavioral and cognitive sciences.
The Calls are sent to 10,000 BBS Associates, so there is no expectation
(indeed, it would be calamitous) that each recipient should comment on
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abstract and keywords below.
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*** TARGET ARTICLE INFORMATION ***
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TITLE: Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders: Which
evolutionary genetic models work best?
AUTHORS: Matthew C. Keller and Geoffrey Miller
ABSTRACT: Given that natural selection is so powerful at optimizing complex
adaptations, why does it seem unable to eliminate genes (susceptibility alleles) that
predispose to common, harmful, heritable mental disorders, such as schizophrenia or
bipolar disorder? We assess three leading explanations for this apparent paradox from
evolutionary genetic theory: ancestral neutrality (susceptibility alleles were not
harmful among ancestors), balancing selection (susceptibility alleles sometimes
increased fitness), and polygenic mutation-selection balance (mental disorders
reflect the inevitable mutational load on the thousands of genes underlying human
behavior). The first two explanations are commonly assumed in psychiatric genetics
and Darwinian psychiatry, while mutation-selection has often been discounted. All
three models can explain persistent genetic variance in some traits under some
conditions, but the first two have serious problems in explaining human mental
disorders. Ancestral neutrality fails to explain low mental disorder frequencies and
requires implausibly small selection coefficients against mental disorders given the
data on the reproductive costs of mental disorders. Balancing selection (including
spatio-temporal variation in selection, heterozygote advantage, antagonistic
pleiotropy, and frequency-dependent selection) tends to favor environmentally
contingent adaptations (which would show no heritability) or high-frequency alleles
(which psychiatric genetics would have already found). Only polygenic
mutation-selection balance seems consistent with the data on mental disorder
prevalence rates, fitness costs, the likely rarity of susceptibility alleles, and the
increased risks of mental disorders with brain trauma, inbreeding, and paternal age.
This evolutionary-genetic framework for mental disorders has wide-ranging
implications for psychology, psychiatry, behavior genetics, molecular genetics, and
evolutionary approaches to studying human behavior.
KEYWORDS: adaptation, behavior genetics, Darwinian psychiatry, evolution,
evolutionary genetics, evolutionary psychology, mental disorders, mutation-selection
balance, psychiatric genetics, quantitative trait loci (QTL).
FULL TEXT:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Keller-10112005/Referees/
==================================================================
*** IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS ***
==================================================================
Please DO NOT respond to this email. If you wish to submit a proposal for
commentary and/or suggest potential commentators, please go to the new
Online Commentary Proposal System at the following URL:
http://www.bbsonline.org/perl/commentary/commproposal?authordir=Keller-1011…
* If you only wish to suggest potential commentators, please ignore prompts to
submit a proposal with expertise information.
* If you experience technical difficulties, please email bbs(a)bbsonline.org.
NOTE: Commentators must be BBS Associates, or suggested by a BBS Associate. If you are
not a BBS Associate, please follow the instructions linked below:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/associnst.html
** Please respond to this Call no later than February 21, 2006 **
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Barbara Finlay - Editor
Paul Bloom - Editor
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
bbs(a)bbsonline.org
http://www.bbsonline.org
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