Publication | Closed Access
The Influence of eWOM on Virtual Consumer Communities: Social Capital, Consumer Learning, and Behavioral Outcomes
401
Citations
37
References
2007
Year
NeurogenomicsGeneticsConsumer ResearchVirtual Consumer CommunitiesSocial InfluenceCommunicationOnline Learning CommunityOnline Customer BehaviorCustomer CommunityAnimal GeneticsDomestic DogsSocial MediaOnline CommunityManagementConsumer BehaviorSocial CapitalNeurogeneticsQuantitative GeneticsMedicineBehavioral SyndromeUser ExperienceEvolutionary GeneticsGenetic VariationBreed DiversificationPopulation GeneticsMarketingDevelopmental BiologySocial ComputingInteractive MarketingEvolutionary BiologyDomestic DogVirtual CommunityConsumer LearningAnimal Behavior
<h3>Summary</h3> Selective breeding of domestic dogs has generated diverse breeds often optimized for performing specialized tasks. Despite the heritability of breed-typical behavioral traits, identification of causal loci has proven challenging due to the complexity of canine population structure. We overcome longstanding difficulties in identifying genetic drivers of canine behavior by developing an innovative framework for understanding relationships between breeds and the behaviors that define them, utilizing genetic data for over 4,000 domestic, semi-feral and wild canids and behavioral survey data for over 46,000 dogs. We identify ten major canine genetic lineages and their behavioral correlates, and show that breed diversification is predominantly driven by non-coding regulatory variation. We determine that lineage-associated genes converge in neurodevelopmental co-expression networks, identifying a sheepdog-associated enrichment for interrelated axon guidance functions. This work presents a scaffold for canine diversification that positions the domestic dog as an unparalleled system for revealing the genetic origins of behavioral diversity.
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