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. 2015 Feb 2;112(7):2103–2108. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1411065112

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.

Phenotype-based view on evolvability. (A) Evolvability accounts for the accessible novel phenotypes, whereas developmental constraints imply that certain hypothetical forms are not possible: phenotype 2 (purple) is not available by gradual mutation. (B) Innovations accessible from a given genotype constitute its phenotypic neighborhood. The arrangement and diversity of this neighborhood is a measure of the genotype’s evolvability (16). Genotype space is high dimensional, but we schematically represent it here in 2D for illustrative purposes.