Overview
Pattern formation in evolutionary biology is the study of how spatially organized structures and arrangements, such as body segments, organ positions, and the repeated elements of tissues, arise during development and how the mechanisms that generate them evolve across lineages. It addresses the developmental rules and genetic regulatory systems that convert a relatively uniform early embryo into an ordered array of differentiated parts, and how modifications to those systems contribute to morphological diversity and the origin of new forms. Conserved regulatory genes are central to this process, illustrated by the role of Hox genes in establishing positional identity along the body axis during vertebrate brain development, and by the deeply shared genetic toolkit that patterns animal body plans. The field connects pattern formation to the genetic basis of speciation and to developmental models that explain how related organisms come to differ, as in studies of ontogenes and speciation in Drosophila. Comparative work on protein-domain conservation, gene architecture, and phylogenetic distribution across metazoans links the molecular evolution of regulatory proteins to the patterning outcomes they control, while broader reflection on evolutionary theory situates these processes within the history of the discipline. By explaining how ordered structures develop and change, the study of pattern formation clarifies the developmental and genetic foundations of morphological evolution.
Research published in this journal
8 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Conservation, Creation, and Evolution: Revising the Darwinian Project
Evolutionary Conservation of Hox Genes in Vertebrate Brain Development
Ontogenes and the Problem of Speciation
Interactions Between Natural Nuclear Reactors and Microbial Evolutionary Processes
Evolution of the Concept of Evolution
Rbm45 Phylogenetics, Protein Domain Conservation, and Gene Architecture in Clade Metazoa
Delving into the Ideas of Charles Darwin: A Study of His Pre-Beagle Musings, Beagle Expedition, and Subsequent Developments
How this research is being cited
The 8 articles above have been cited 43 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2025 · Communications Biology
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2025 · Artificial Life
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2025 · BMC Genomics
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2025 · Scientific Reports
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2025 · Communications Biology
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2025 · Ethical Review of Social Sciences
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2025 · Scientific Reports
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2024 · Journal of Evolutionary Science
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Evolutionary Biology Pattern Formation, linking to each citing work.