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In his book “Ontogeny and Phylogeny”, Stephen J. Gould described the significance and importance of heterochrony as the mechanism of evolution. However, he never provided a specific mechanism for how and why such changes occur, obviating the possibility of scientifically testing its hypothesized role in evolution.
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The current article demonstrates the value added in understanding heterochrony as a sequence of cell-cell interactions that can be modified by environmental factors to understand how and why evolution has occurred. The power of this approach is in its ability to understand the processes of development, physiology, homeostasis and pathology as one continuous, scale free evolutionary mechanism for the first time.
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