neoteny

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neoteny
neoteny Zool. (niːˈɒtənɪ) [ad. G. neotenie (J. C. E. Kollman 1884, in Verh. Naturf. Ges. Basel VII. 391), f. Gr. νέος young + τείνειν to extend.] a. The retention of juvenile characteristics in adult life. b. The possession of sexual maturity by an animal still in its larval stage. Cf. neoteinia, -t... Oxford English Dictionary
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Neoteny in humans
Neoteny in humans is the retention of juvenile traits well into adulthood. Neoteny and its connection with human specialization features Neoteny is not a ubiquitous trait of the human phenotype. wikipedia.org
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Social media and the neoteny trap | Jess Gill
7 days ago — ... girls eating a bag of doritos as “girl dinner.” Some zoomer girlies have adopted the label of being a “girl” to justify incompetent ...
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Heterochrony
retarded in neoteny. Neoteny retards the development of the organism into an adult, and has been described as "eternal childhood". wikipedia.org
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pædomorphosis
pædomorphosis Biol. (piːdəʊˈmɔːfəsɪs, -mɔːˈfəʊsɪs) [f. pædo- + morphosis.] Phylogenetic change indicated by the retention of juvenile characteristics in the adult form.1922 W. Garstang in Jrnl. Linnean Soc. (Zool.) XXXV. 100 In other articles I propose to deal with the origin and significance of lar... Oxford English Dictionary
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Discosauriscus
However, more recent studies concluded that some subadult, probably terrestrial specimens were known, so the case for neoteny in this taxon is not as well-supported wikipedia.org
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progenesis
progenesis, n. Biol. Brit. /prə(ʊ)ˈdʒɛnɪsɪs/, U.S. /proʊˈdʒɛnəsəs/ [‹ pro- prefix2 + -genesis comb. form, after French progénèse (A. Giard & J. Bonnier 1887, in Travaux de l'Inst. Zool. de Lille et du Laboratoire de Zool. Maritime de Wimereux 5 ii. 195).] Precocious sexual maturity in an organism st... Oxford English Dictionary
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Brachycormus
Neoteny is evident in some larval specimens by the retention of branchial arches and a high degree of ossification in the hyobranchial skeleton. The reason for this neoteny may be explained by a drop in global temperature during the Oligocene cooling event, which may have induced a delay in somatic wikipedia.org
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pædogenesis
pædogenesis Biol. (piːdəʊˈdʒɛnɪsɪs) Also (chiefly U.S.) pedo-. [mod.L., coined in Ger. (K. von Baer 1866, in Bull. Acad. Imp. Sci. St.-Pétersbourg IX. 96), f. pædo- + genesis.] Reproduction by larval or immature forms of animals, esp. certain insects; cf. neoteny b. Hence pædogeˈnetic a., pertaining... Oxford English Dictionary
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Axolotl
These conditions are thought to favor neoteny. This discovery was the starting point of research about neoteny. wikipedia.org
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What is the term for being younger than the body age? I remember that I once attended a seminar in which the speaker talked about the heart rate of different kinds of butterflies. Normally, the heart rate of the adult...
# Neoteny > Neoteny (/niˈɒtəni/), also called **juvenilization** , is the delaying or slowing of the physiological (or somatic) development of an organism Neoteny is found in modern humans.
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Perennibranchiate
See also Neoteny References William Benjamin Carpenter (1854) Principles of Comparative Physiology, Published by Blanchard and Lea, 752 pages C. wikipedia.org
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Yellow-peppered salamander
Neoteny may occur in some individuals, but neotenic populations are not known. References Mole salamanders Amphibians described in 1963 wikipedia.org
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Coastal giant salamander
Neoteny Some coastal giant salamander larvae continue to grow into adults and become sexually mature without losing their external gills. This process is called neoteny. Neoteny is particularly common in the British Columbia populations. wikipedia.org
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Louis Bolk
Gavin de Beer and Stephen Jay Gould wrote about him and further developed this theory of neoteny in humans. wikipedia.org
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