Key research themes
1. How fast can major evolutionary changes in animal body size occur and what constraints influence these rates?
This research theme investigates the pace of large-scale evolutionary transformations, particularly body size changes in mammals, exploring the generation times, biomechanical constraints, and asymmetries between increases and decreases in size. Understanding these rates has implications for interpreting adaptive radiations and recovery dynamics following mass extinction events.
2. What molecular, developmental, and regulatory mechanisms underlie the origin of multicellularity and complex animal body plans?
This theme focuses on the evolutionary origins of animal multicellularity through genomic, developmental, and cancer biology perspectives. It interrogates the genetic toolkits pre-dating animals, mechanisms regulating cell differentiation, adhesion, and communication, and how transitions to multicellularity can be paralleled by phenomena observed in tumor evolution. Understanding these mechanisms sheds light on the emergence of complex tissue architectures and hierarchical biological organization.
3. How do the integration of organismal, developmental, and cognitive perspectives reshape evolutionary theory and understanding of animal evolution?
This area explores the role of organism-centered frameworks, developmental plasticity, cognitive evolution, and the integration of behavioral and physiological traits in evolutionary explanations. It encompasses theoretical debates on the Modern Synthesis versus Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, the evolution of cognition as an embodied multifactor process, and the re-integration of purposeful agency and plasticity into evolutionary thinking.