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ALIFE
2004

Using Avida to Test the Effects of Natural Selection on Phylogenetic Reconstruction Methods

13 years 11 months ago
Using Avida to Test the Effects of Natural Selection on Phylogenetic Reconstruction Methods
Phylogenetic trees group organisms by their ancestral relationships. There are a number of distinct algorithms used to reconstruct these trees from molecular sequence data, but different methods sometimes give conflicting results. Since there are few precisely known phylogenies, simulations are typically used to test the quality of reconstruction algorithms. These simulations randomly evolve strings of symbols to produce a tree, and then the algorithms are run with the tree leaves as inputs. Here we use Avida to test two widely used reconstruction methods, which gives us the chance to observe the effect of natural selection on tree reconstruction. We find that if the organisms undergo natural selection between branch points, the methods will be successful even on very large time scales. However, these algorithms often falter when selection is absent.
George I. Hagstrom, Dehua H. Hang, Charles Ofria,
Added 16 Dec 2010
Updated 16 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2004
Where ALIFE
Authors George I. Hagstrom, Dehua H. Hang, Charles Ofria, Eric Torng
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