right|thumb|280px|Overview of paleopolyploidy process. Many higher eukaryotes were paleopolyploids at some point during their evolutionary history.
right|thumb|280px|Overview of paleopolyploidy process. Many higher eukaryotes were paleopolyploids at some point during their evolutionary history.
Paleopolyploidy is the result of genome duplications which occurred at least several million years ago (MYA). Such an event could either double the genome of a single species (autopolyploidy) or combine those of two species (allopolyploidy). Because of functional redundancy, genes are rapidly silenced or lost from the duplicated genomes. Most paleopolyploids, through evolutionary time, have lost their polyploid status through a process called diploidization, and are currently considered diploids, e.g., baker's yeast, Arabidopsis thaliana, and perhaps humans.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).