Although a number of studies have shown that natural and laboratory
populations initially well-adapted to their environment can evolve rapidly when
conditions suddenly change, the dynamics of rapid adaptation are not well
understood. Here a population genetic model of polygenic selection is analyzed
to describe the short-term response of a quantitative trait after a sudden
shift of the phenotypic optimum. We provide explicit analytical expressions for
the time scales over which the trait mean approaches the new optimum. We find
that when the effect sizes are small relative to a scaled mutation rate, the
genomic signatures of polygenic selection are small to moderate allele
frequency changes that occur in the short-term phase in a synergistic fashion.
In contrast, selective sweeps, i.e., dramatic changes in the allele frequency
may occur provided the size of the effect is sufficiently large. Applications
of our theoretical results to the relationship between QTL and selective sweep
mapping and to tests of fast polygenic adaptation are discussed