Literature DB >> 25999395

Impacts of Terraces on Phylogenetic Inference.

Michael J Sanderson1, Michelle M McMahon2, Alexandros Stamatakis3, Derrick J Zwickl2, Mike Steel2.   

Abstract

Terraces are sets of trees with precisely the same likelihood or parsimony score, which can be induced by missing sequences in partitioned multi-locus phylogenetic data matrices. The potentially large set of trees on a terrace can be characterized by enumeration algorithms or consensus methods that exploit the pattern of partial taxon coverage in the data, independent of the sequence data themselves. Terraces can add ambiguity and complexity to phylogenetic inference, particularly in settings where inference is already challenging: data sets with many taxa and relatively few loci. In this article we present five new findings about terraces and their impacts on phylogenetic inference. First, we clarify assumptions about partitioning scheme model parameters that are necessary for the existence of terraces. Second, we explore the dependence of terrace size on partitioning scheme and indicate how to find the partitioning scheme associated with the largest terrace containing a given tree. Third, we highlight the impact of terrace size on bootstrap estimates of confidence limits in clades, and characterize the surprising result that the bootstrap proportion for a clade, as it is usually calculated, can be entirely determined by the frequency of bipartitions on a terrace, with some bipartitions receiving high support even when incorrect. Fourth, we dissect some effects of prior distributions of edge lengths on the computed posterior probabilities of clades on terraces, to understand an example in which long edges "attract" each other in Bayesian inference. Fifth, we describe how assuming relationships between edge-lengths of different loci, as an attempt to avoid terraces, can also be problematic when taxon coverage is partial, specifically when heterotachy is present. Finally, we discuss strategies for remediation of some of these problems. One promising approach finds a minimal set of taxa which, when deleted from the data matrix, reduces the size of a terrace to a single tree.
© The Author(s) 2015. Published by Oxford University Press, on behalf of the Society of Systematic Biologists. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Keywords:  Bootstrap; partitioned model; phylogenetics; posterior probability; terrace

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25999395     DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syv024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Syst Biol        ISSN: 1063-5157            Impact factor:   15.683


  10 in total

1.  Terrace Aware Data Structure for Phylogenomic Inference from Supermatrices.

Authors:  Olga Chernomor; Arndt von Haeseler; Bui Quang Minh
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2016-04-26       Impact factor: 15.683

2.  Gradients Do Grow on Trees: A Linear-Time O(N)-Dimensional Gradient for Statistical Phylogenetics.

Authors:  Xiang Ji; Zhenyu Zhang; Andrew Holbrook; Akihiko Nishimura; Guy Baele; Andrew Rambaut; Philippe Lemey; Marc A Suchard
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 16.240

3.  Consequences of Common Topological Rearrangements for Partition Trees in Phylogenomic Inference.

Authors:  Olga Chernomor; Bui Quang Minh; Arndt von Haeseler
Journal:  J Comput Biol       Date:  2015-10-08       Impact factor: 1.479

4.  On Defining and Finding Islands of Trees and Mitigating Large Island Bias.

Authors:  Ana Serra Silva; Mark Wilkinson
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2021-10-13       Impact factor: 15.683

5.  Homology-Aware Phylogenomics at Gigabase Scales.

Authors:  M J Sanderson; Marius Nicolae; M M McMahon
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 9.160

Review 6.  Review Paper: The Shape of Phylogenetic Treespace.

Authors:  Katherine St. John
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2017-01-01       Impact factor: 15.683

7.  An integrative systematic framework helps to reconstruct skeletal evolution of glass sponges (Porifera, Hexactinellida).

Authors:  Martin Dohrmann; Christopher Kelley; Michelle Kelly; Andrzej Pisera; John N A Hooper; Henry M Reiswig
Journal:  Front Zool       Date:  2017-03-21       Impact factor: 3.172

8.  Two C++ libraries for counting trees on a phylogenetic terrace.

Authors:  R Biczok; P Bozsoky; P Eisenmann; J Ernst; T Ribizel; F Scholz; A Trefzer; F Weber; M Hamann; A Stamatakis
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2018-10-01       Impact factor: 6.937

9.  An investigation of irreproducibility in maximum likelihood phylogenetic inference.

Authors:  Xing-Xing Shen; Yuanning Li; Chris Todd Hittinger; Xue-Xin Chen; Antonis Rokas
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-11-30       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  The prevalence of terraced treescapes in analyses of phylogenetic data sets.

Authors:  Barbara H Dobrin; Derrick J Zwickl; Michael J Sanderson
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2018-04-04       Impact factor: 3.260

  10 in total

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