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Universita’ di Udine
Departimento di Ingegneria Elettrica Gestionale e Meccanica
17 07 2006
Exaptation and the management of serendipity
Pierpaolo Andriani & Jack CohenDurham University/Warwick University
Main points
What it is and why it differs from adaptation
Exaptation plays a crucial role in the evolution of technologies (Innovation and emergence of new niches/sectors)
Exaptation precedes adaptation
Exaptation and innovation
1. What is it?
Exaptation
Microwave oven discovery: a template for innovation?
Did Edison predict this?
Arcimboldo: portrait of Rudolf II emperor of Austria (1590)
Definitions
“We suggest that such characters, evolved for other usages (or for no function at all), and later “coopted” for their current role, be called exaptations.” (Gould and Vrba 1982).
“Refers to cases in which an entity was selected for one trait but eventually ended up carrying out a related but different function” (Mokyr 1998).
"The later exploitation in a new context of an acquisition originally made in another entirely (Tattersal, 1998)
The origin of the concept
First introduced by Darwin as pre-adaptation to answer the 5% paradox raised by Mivart in his 1871 book “On the genesis of species” (See Jay Gould essay “Not necessarily a wing”)
Exaptations are enabled by ‘spandrels’: Jay Gould and Lewontin in “The spandrels of San Marco” (1979) introduce spandrels as “correlation of growth”
Jay Gould & Vrba (PaleoBiology, 1982) introduce the term ‘exaptation’. Ex-aptation and ad-aptation constitute the subclasses of aptation
Exaptation, adaptation and aptation
Gould and Vrba (1982), “Exaptation – a missing term in the science of form”, Paleobiology, vol. 8, N. 1, p.5
Limits of adaptationism
From the latin: ad + aptus = toward a fit (for a particular role)
“a feature is an adaptation only if it was built by natural selection for the function it now performs” (Jay Gould)
Based on gradualism. Consequently:
Suboptimality in fitness landscape (Kauffman, 1993) Complexity catastrophy (Kauffman, 1993) Mass extinctions (Jay Gould, 1990)
In terms of innovation, adaptation is useful to make sense of:– Incremental, market-pull innovation
But it doesn’t explain:– Radical, techn-push, disruptive innovation– Architectural innovation
Dr. Pangloss – The best of the possible worlds
Things cannot be other than they are... Everything is made for the best purpose. Our noses were made to carry spectacles, so we have spectacles. Legs were clearly intended for breeches, and we wear them
The non pre-statable phase-space of technologies
Exaptation and invention
Three fundamental ways of inventing new things:
– Creation of new science/technology (innovation as invention model)
– Transfer from one use to another (innovation as transfer model)
– Design of new architectures based on riconfiguration of existing modules (recombinant innovation or ‘brokering’ model)
Application
Function
Tool
Finality
application
Adaptive single peak fitness
landscape for specific
tool/function
Tools Functions
Co-specialisation
Degree of co-dependence of tools from context (fine-
tunedness)
Exps fall in areas with zero foreseable market potential
and generate new peaks
Exaptational phase space
Needs/wants
Traditional exptTool-based exploration: matching
existing tools with functionsPush-exapt
Need-based exploration: matching existing
functions with toolsPull-exapt
Applications: conjunction of tool and function
Microwave oven discovery: a template for innovation?
Exaptation generates niche construction
ToolsFunctions
Radar detection sector
Magnetron
Microwave oven sector
Microwave oven
Food preparation sectorExaptational (push)
trajectory
Adaptational / Exaptational
trajectory
Exaptation precedes adaptation
Time
# Diversity
• The geography of adaptational phase space is convergent toward an attractor. The phase space is ‘pre-statable’
• Adaptation is driven by natural selection
• It takes place according to traditional niche dynamics
• Exaptation has no attractors
• no niche pre-exists before the organism/technology exapts; there is no market before the tool/invention is ‘perverted’: “niche constructionism”
Adaptational (Darwinian and Lamarckian) trajectory
Bifurcation Exaptation
The dynamic of exaptation in innovation
Application
tool
function
new
old
old new
Push-expt
Ex. Microwave from magnetron
Mobile telephony masts x meteorology prediction
Pull-expt
Ex:
Champion: Ideo
Adaptation – Market-pull
Ex. Gillette progression from 1 to 3 blades
Radical invention/innovation
Ex. X-ray radiography
Horizontal and vertical exaptation
# tools
Ap
plic
atio
n
Old
New
Interchangeable parts
Assembly line
Flow Production
Exaptation and disruptive innovation model
From Clayton Christensen (1997) “The Innovator’s dilemma”
Photo titles books
??
The management of exaptation
Is exaptation manageable?
Are there rules behind contingency and serendipity?
Why certain companies and localities are persistently more innovative than others?
Why does innovation seem to autocatalyse more innovation?
Exaptation and small worlds structure
Manage structural holes
Bridging small worlds (Hargadon, 2003)
Recombinant networks
Manage module reconfiguration
Manage dynamic specialisation
Specialisation
Research program
Simulation – Research expt in different types of social networks
» random graph, scale free, modular and hierarchical nw
» Use ratio strong to weak ties (dense homogeneous flow against sparse heterogeneous flow)
– Use cellular and reconfigurative mechanisms as contexts
Empirical research– Compare and contrast cellular based and reconfiguration based
situations
– Analyse history of exceptionally innovative companies (3M, Sony, IBM, …) and track instances of expts
– Technology transfer between sectors and supply-chains
– Recombinant innovation
Our claims
Exaptation is an ubiquitous mechanism in biological and technological innovation
The emergence of biological niches and industrial sectors is due to an initial exaptation followed by adaptive diffusion. Radiation of technologies occurs at a rate determined by the coupled dance between exaptation and adaptation
Emergence of novelties is due to a combinatorial dynamics that depends on the speed with which tools/traits are exposed to new contexts
Important variables are form, function and context
We are accustomed to adaptation, which assumes convergence of structure towards better function. Initially, however, at the root of any adaptive trajectory it is usual for a structure to have been subverted – perverted – to a new function: what Gould and Vrba called “exaptation”. Generally this has been regarded as contingent, serendipitous. We believe that “complexity” rather than reductionist models, particularly plotting the geography of exaptational phase space, suggests several regularities that could be exploited to explain puzzling biological innovations and perhaps to develop a new strategy for technological/industrial innovation. Recombinant innovation rather than mutation driven innovation characterises both technology and biology. The driver of exaptation is not only function or form, but context
Thank you
Open for collaboration on exaptational research