On the Analysis of Evolutionary Change along Single Branches in a Phylogeny

2008 The American Naturalist 61 citations

Abstract

Comparative biologists are sometimes interested in estimating the evolutionary rate along single branches in a phylogeny. I evaluate two methods by which the evolutionary rate along single branches can be compared with the evolutionary rate throughout the rest of the tree. The first is McPeek's contrasts method, and the second is a likelihood method presented independently in two recently published studies. Although the latter method was developed primarily for the comparison of rates among clades, the approach is equally suited for the analysis of evolutionary rate along single or isolated branches. I find that Type I error is acceptable in both methods but that power and parameter estimation are relatively poor in McPeek's method as it is typically applied.

Keywords

PhylogeneticsCladeBiologyEvolutionary dynamicsEvolutionary biologyTree (set theory)Evolutionary algorithmPhylogenetic treeMaximum likelihoodRate of evolutionStatisticsComputer scienceMathematicsArtificial intelligenceDemographyGenetics

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Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
172
Issue
1
Pages
140-147
Citations
61
Access
Closed

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Liam J. Revell (2008). On the Analysis of Evolutionary Change along Single Branches in a Phylogeny. The American Naturalist , 172 (1) , 140-147. https://doi.org/10.1086/588078

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DOI
10.1086/588078