Aging Theory Glossary

The following are definitions for terms used on this web site:

Active aging theoryAging theory in which aging is the pro-active result of an evolved life span management or regulation system – same as adaptive aging.
Adaptive aging theoryAging theory proposing that aging or other organism feature that purposely limits life span evolved because a limited life span creates group, kin, or evolvability benefit.
Antagonistic pleiotropyAging theory c 1957 in which an unknown individually beneficial trait incurs aging as an unavoidable side-effect due to pleiotropy.
Digital GeneticsStudy of information (digital data) aspects of inheritance mechanisms and implications for evolutionary mechanics.
Disposable soma theoryAging theory c 1975 in which aging is an unavoidable side-effect of some trait that benefits reproduction.
Evolutionary mechanicsMechanisms whereby evolutionary process operates e.g. natural selection.
Evolvability theoryEvolutionary mechanics theory c 1995 in which an organism’s capacity for evolution is a factor in the evolution process and benefit to evolvability can offset individual disadvantage.
Gene-oriented theoryEvolutionary mechanics theory c 1975 in which benefit to gene propagation can compensate for individual disadvantage.
Group selectionEvolutionary mechanics theory c 1962 in which group benefit can compensate for individual disadvantage.
Individual benefitA benefit to the survival or reproductive ability of an individual organism or its direct descendents – required by traditional mechanics — specifically excludes group, kin, evolvability, or gene-oriented benefit.
Kin selectionEvolutionary mechanics theory c 1964 in which benefit to close relatives can compensate for individual disadvantage.
Medawar’s hypothesisTheory c 1952 that evolutionary disadvantage of aging or otherwise limited life span declines following age at which an organism is first capable of reproducing.
Modern SynthesisEvolutionary mechanics theory c 1945 similar to neo-Darwinism.
Mutation accumulationTheory c 1952 in which aging results from many adverse mutations all of which only cause significant adverse effects in late life.
Neo-DarwinismEvolutionary mechanics theory c 1945 in which natural selection entirely defines evolution process; requires evolved traits to have individual benefit.
PhenotypeInherited physical and behavioral characteristics of an organism.
PleiotropySituation in which a single gene controls multiple phenotypic traits.
Programmed agingSame as adaptive aging – aging is purposely genetically programmed.
Traditional mechanicsEvolutionary mechanisms as defined by pre-1962 evolutionary mechanics theory i.e. neo-Darwinism or Modern Synthesis.
Unavoidable side-effectSituation in which the evolution process is unable to accomplish a particular beneficial function without incurring an adverse side-effect e.g. aging.