E pluribus unum, ex uno plura: quantitative and single-gene perspectives on the study of behavior

Annual Review of Neuroscience
Ralph J Greenspan

Abstract

Genetic studies of behavior have traditionally come in two flavors: quantitative genetic studies of natural variants and single-gene studies of induced mutants. Each employed different techniques and methods of analysis toward the common, ultimate goal of understanding how genes influence behavior. With the advent of new genomic technologies, and also the realization that mechanisms underlying behavior involve a considerable degree of complex gene interaction, the traditionally separate strands of behavior genetics are merging into a single, synthetic strategy.

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Citations

Feb 9, 2006·Mammalian Genome : Official Journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society·Leah C SolbergJonathan Flint
Dec 1, 2009·Integrative and Comparative Biology·Suzy C P RennAmeara C W Tanner
Aug 19, 2007·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Daniel R Papaj, Emilie C Snell-Rood
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May 23, 2018·The Journal of Experimental Biology·Ian A Meinertzhagen
Mar 23, 2018·Genetics·Ryan A York
Jun 19, 2004·Journal of Neurogenetics·Ralph J Greenspan
May 30, 2006·The Journal of Experimental Biology·P V Nguyen
Jun 16, 2021·Journal of Neurogenetics·Ralph J Greenspan

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
dissections
X-ray
dissection

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