| Literature DB >> 25496383 |
Nicolas Fiorini1, Vincent Lefort2, François Chevenet3,4, Vincent Berry5, Anne-Muriel Arigon Chifolleau6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collaborative tools are of great help in conducting projects involving distant workers. Recent web technologies have helped to build such tools for jointly editing office documents and scientific data, yet none are available for handling phylogenies. Though a large number of studies and projects in evolutionary biology and systematics involve collaborations between scientists of different institutes, current tree comparison visualization software and websites are directed toward single-user access. Moreover, tree comparison functionalities are dispersed between different software that mainly focus on high level single tree visualization but to the detriment of basic tree comparison features.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25496383 PMCID: PMC4271409 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-014-0253-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Tree comparison facilities of phylogeny visualizing tools
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| TreeView | 2001 | S.a. | No | No | No | No | [ |
| TreeMap3 | 2002 | S.a. | Int. | Yes | No | No | [ |
| TreeDyn | 2007 | S.a. | Int. & scr. | Yes | No | No | [ |
| EPOS | 2008 | S.a. | Int. & scr. | Yes | C. & S. | No | [ |
| PhyloWidget | 2008 | Online | No | No | No | No | [ |
| Archaeopteryx | 2009 | S.a. & Online | Int. & Scr. | No | No | No | [ |
| PhyloExplorer | 2009 | online | No | Yes | No | No | [ |
| ScripTree | 2010 | S.a. & Online | Scr. | Yes | No | No | [ |
| TreeVector | 2010 | Online | No | No | No | No | [ |
| iTOL | 2011 | Online | Scr. | No | No | No | [ |
| ETE | 2011 | S.a. & Online | Int. & scr. | No | No | No | [ |
| Dendroscope | 2012 | S.a. | Int. & scr. | Yes | C. & S. | No | [ |
| FigTree | 2012 | S.a. | Int. | No | No | No | [ |
| jsPhyloSVG | 2012 | Online | Scr. | No | No | No | [ |
| Evolview | 2012 | Online | Scr. | No | No | No | [ |
| CompPhy | 2014 | Online | Int. & scr. | Yes | C. & S. | Yes | This paper |
Year: date of the last release; Type: some tools run as stand-alone (S.a.) software after a download/installation procedure, others can be run online, inside a web browser; Annotations indicates which tools allow users to annotate trees with extra information (other than just branch length or support): Int. (available from the interface), Scr. (available through a script); Joint edit. indicates which tools offer edit functions that jointly apply to a set of trees (compared to tools with which the same action has to repeated on each tree) Cons./SuperT. indicates which tools offer consensus (C.) and/or supertree (S.) computation; Collab. indicates which tools offer functionalities allowing collaborative work.
Figure 1The architecture of the platform. Projects and their trees are stored in a relational database; ScripTree [7] is used as the picture generating module. Perl is used for tree modifications requiring computation, e.g., restricting trees to common taxa, and as a wrapper for external tree computations modules, e.g., computing a consensus with PAUP* [23]. Users interact with CompPhy from their browser, whose content is connected to the CompPhy core essentially through the jQuery javascript framework.
Figure 2’s main interface. Zone 1 contains the website navigation bar. Zone 2 displays the project menu, a toolbox allowing participants to coordinate when editing trees together, and the tree collections, each tree being identified by a name and a sketched picture. Zone 3 displays two workbenches on which trees can be laid down for individual observation or comparison. Zone 4 presents several tools to edit trees and manage the project.