Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Types of Selection01:46

Types of Selection

41.1K
Natural selection influences the frequencies of particular alleles and phenotypes within populations in several different ways. Primarily, natural selection can be directional, stabilizing, or disruptive. Directional selection favors one extreme trait and shifts the population towards that phenotype while selecting against individuals displaying alternate traits. Stabilizing selection favors an intermediate trait with a narrow range of variation. Deviation from the optimal phenotype towards an...
41.1K
Mate Choice01:20

Mate Choice

9.5K
Mate choice—the decision about whom to mate with—is a type of natural selection, since animals must reproduce to pass down their genes. Mate choice is also called intersexual selection because the behavior occurs between the sexes.
9.5K
Vaccinations01:51

Vaccinations

45.1K
Overview
45.1K
Frequency-dependent Selection01:21

Frequency-dependent Selection

22.2K
When the fitness of a trait is influenced by how common it is (i.e., its frequency) relative to different traits within a population, this is referred to as frequency-dependent selection. Frequency-dependent selection may occur between species or within a single species. This type of selection can either be positive—with more common phenotypes having higher fitness—or negative, with rarer phenotypes conferring increased fitness.
22.2K
Inclusive Fitness00:57

Inclusive Fitness

36.3K
Most altruistic behavior—in which one animal helps another at a cost to themselves—occurs between relatives. Scientists think these altruistic behaviors evolved because they increase the inclusive fitness of the animal providing help.
36.3K
Altruism01:03

Altruism

41.5K
Altruistic behaviors are “unselfish” behaviors—those that help another individual at the expense of the individual carrying out the behavior. Despite the negative consequences for the altruistic animal, these behaviors are thought to have evolved for several reasons.
41.5K

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Reporting Interest-Holder Engagement in Practice Guidelines: The RIGHT-MuSE Checklist.

Annals of internal medicine·2026
Same author

Editors' Choice: July 2026.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same author

Editors' Choice: June 2026.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same author

Editors' Choice: May 2026.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same author

Editors' choice April 2026.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same author

Editors' Choice: March 2026.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same journal

AI-enabled GRADE: How the GRADE Working Group will use automation to rate the certainty of evidence of intervention effects.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same journal

Harms Reporting Was Frequently Incomplete or Discordant in Biomedical Randomized Trials Published in 2023: A Meta-epidemiological Study.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same journal

Using an Open Science Checklist in Grant Proposal Reviews to Predict Reproducibility of Funded Publications.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same journal

A comparison of five statistical methods used to analyse longitudinal EORTC QLQ-C30 quality of life scores in randomised controlled trials: a simulation study.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same journal

Sample Size Determination for Decision-centered Pragmatic Trials.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
Same journal

Many multicenter randomized controlled trials do not account for center effect: a methodological review.

Journal of clinical epidemiology·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Aug 17, 2025

Choice and No-Choice Bioassays to Study the Pupation Preference and Emergence Success of Ectropis grisescens
05:19

Choice and No-Choice Bioassays to Study the Pupation Preference and Emergence Success of Ectropis grisescens

Published on: October 30, 2018

6.3K

November 2022 Editor's choice

Peter Tugwell, David Tovey

    Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
    |December 16, 2022
    PubMed
    Summary

    No abstract available in PubMed .

    More Related Videos

    Perspectives on Neuroscience
    26:41

    Perspectives on Neuroscience

    Published on: July 31, 2007

    5.0K
    A Novel Method for Involving Women of Color at High Risk for Preterm Birth in Research Priority Setting
    14:43

    A Novel Method for Involving Women of Color at High Risk for Preterm Birth in Research Priority Setting

    Published on: January 12, 2018

    11.9K

    Related Experiment Videos

    Last Updated: Aug 17, 2025

    Choice and No-Choice Bioassays to Study the Pupation Preference and Emergence Success of Ectropis grisescens
    05:19

    Choice and No-Choice Bioassays to Study the Pupation Preference and Emergence Success of Ectropis grisescens

    Published on: October 30, 2018

    6.3K
    Perspectives on Neuroscience
    26:41

    Perspectives on Neuroscience

    Published on: July 31, 2007

    5.0K
    A Novel Method for Involving Women of Color at High Risk for Preterm Birth in Research Priority Setting
    14:43

    A Novel Method for Involving Women of Color at High Risk for Preterm Birth in Research Priority Setting

    Published on: January 12, 2018

    11.9K