The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system

General characteristics of Complex Adaptive Systems include self-adaptation and organisation, emergence, multitasking, robustness, critical phases, diversity and compatibility with such statistical models as Thresholds and Scale Free Networks. The aim was to investigate whether dental development ex...

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Main Authors: Alan H. Brook, Toby E. Hughes, Grant C. Townsend, Richard N. Smith, Matthew D. Brook O'Donnell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dental Anthropology Association 2013-11-01
Series:Dental Anthropology
Online Access:http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/46/26
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spelling doaj-2c9d259b9154487ea98b5b935a5b33ba2021-08-21T13:05:17ZengDental Anthropology AssociationDental Anthropology1096-94112013-11-0126336https://doi.org/10.26575/daj.v26i3.46The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive systemAlan H. Brook0Toby E. Hughes1Grant C. Townsend2Richard N. Smith3Matthew D. Brook O'Donnell4School of Dentistry, University of Adelaide; School of Dentistry, Queen Mary University of LondonSchool of Dentistry, University of AdelaideSchool of Dentistry, University of AdelaideDental School, University of LiverpoolAnnenberg School for Communication Studies, University of PennsylvaniaGeneral characteristics of Complex Adaptive Systems include self-adaptation and organisation, emergence, multitasking, robustness, critical phases, diversity and compatibility with such statistical models as Thresholds and Scale Free Networks. The aim was to investigate whether dental development exhibits the general and statistical characteristics of a Complex Adaptive System, by examining data on normal and abnormal dental development. The findings were that self-adaptation and organisation occur while interactions between genes, epigenetic and environmental factors lead to the emergence of cells, tooth germs and mineralised teeth. Multitasking occurs as signalling pathways act simultaneously and reiteratively during initiation and morphogenesis. Tooth germs that do not attain a critical threshold during development may undergo apoptosis. Diversity is evident in tooth number, size, shape and mineralisation. Statistical investigation shows that males have significantly larger teeth and higher prevalences of megadontia and supernumerary teeth (p<0.05), supporting Brook's Threshold Model which is further developed here to include shape. Image Analysis of tooth dimensions showed they followed a Power Law distribution, with the first 8 of 34 factors in upper lateral incisors accounting for 94.4% of the total variation. In conclusion, the development of the dentition shows the general and statistical characteristics of a Complex Adaptive System.http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/46/26
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alan H. Brook
Toby E. Hughes
Grant C. Townsend
Richard N. Smith
Matthew D. Brook O'Donnell
spellingShingle Alan H. Brook
Toby E. Hughes
Grant C. Townsend
Richard N. Smith
Matthew D. Brook O'Donnell
The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
Dental Anthropology
author_facet Alan H. Brook
Toby E. Hughes
Grant C. Townsend
Richard N. Smith
Matthew D. Brook O'Donnell
author_sort Alan H. Brook
title The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
title_short The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
title_full The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
title_fullStr The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
title_full_unstemmed The development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
title_sort development of the mammalian dentition as a complex adaptive system
publisher Dental Anthropology Association
series Dental Anthropology
issn 1096-9411
publishDate 2013-11-01
description General characteristics of Complex Adaptive Systems include self-adaptation and organisation, emergence, multitasking, robustness, critical phases, diversity and compatibility with such statistical models as Thresholds and Scale Free Networks. The aim was to investigate whether dental development exhibits the general and statistical characteristics of a Complex Adaptive System, by examining data on normal and abnormal dental development. The findings were that self-adaptation and organisation occur while interactions between genes, epigenetic and environmental factors lead to the emergence of cells, tooth germs and mineralised teeth. Multitasking occurs as signalling pathways act simultaneously and reiteratively during initiation and morphogenesis. Tooth germs that do not attain a critical threshold during development may undergo apoptosis. Diversity is evident in tooth number, size, shape and mineralisation. Statistical investigation shows that males have significantly larger teeth and higher prevalences of megadontia and supernumerary teeth (p<0.05), supporting Brook's Threshold Model which is further developed here to include shape. Image Analysis of tooth dimensions showed they followed a Power Law distribution, with the first 8 of 34 factors in upper lateral incisors accounting for 94.4% of the total variation. In conclusion, the development of the dentition shows the general and statistical characteristics of a Complex Adaptive System.
url http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/46/26
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