Background: The pattern of data availability in a phylogenetic data set may lead to the formation of terraces, collections of equally optimal trees. Terraces can arise in tree space if trees are scored with parsimony or with partitioned, edge-unlinked maximum likelihood. Theory predicts that terraces can be large, but their prevalence in contemporary data sets has never been surveyed. We selected 26 data sets and phylogenetic trees reported in recent literature and investigated the terraces to which the trees would belong, under a common set of inference assumptions. We examined terrace size as a function of the sampling properties of the data sets, including taxon coverage density (the proportion of taxon-by-gene positions with any data pr...
Abstract.—Nonparamtric bootstrapping methods may be useful for assessing confidence in a supertree i...
Abstract.—Nonparamtric bootstrapping methods may be useful for assessing confidence in a supertree i...
Abstract.—We have examined the behavior of the "treeness " test for evolutionary indepen-d...
Abstract Background The pattern of data availability in a phylogenetic data set may lead to the form...
Abstract.—Terraces are sets of trees with precisely the same likelihood or parsimony score, which ca...
Abstract. — Terraces are sets of trees with precisely the same likelihood or parsimony score, which ...
That the use of large, multi-locus phylogenetic data sets in molecular evolutionary research provide...
Motivation: The computational investigation of DNA binding motifs from binding sites is one of the c...
In phylogenomic analysis the collection of trees with identical score (maximum likelihood or parsimo...
The superficial resemblance of phylogenetic trees to other branching structures allows searching for...
Background: The superficial resemblance of phylogenetic trees to other branching structures allows s...
The superficial resemblance of phylogenetic trees to other branching structures allows searching for...
In phylogenomics the analysis of concatenated gene alignments, the so-called supermatrix, is commonl...
The GenBank database contains essentially all of the nucleotide sequence data generated for publishe...
<div><p>The GenBank database contains essentially all of the nucleotide sequence data generated for ...
Abstract.—Nonparamtric bootstrapping methods may be useful for assessing confidence in a supertree i...
Abstract.—Nonparamtric bootstrapping methods may be useful for assessing confidence in a supertree i...
Abstract.—We have examined the behavior of the "treeness " test for evolutionary indepen-d...
Abstract Background The pattern of data availability in a phylogenetic data set may lead to the form...
Abstract.—Terraces are sets of trees with precisely the same likelihood or parsimony score, which ca...
Abstract. — Terraces are sets of trees with precisely the same likelihood or parsimony score, which ...
That the use of large, multi-locus phylogenetic data sets in molecular evolutionary research provide...
Motivation: The computational investigation of DNA binding motifs from binding sites is one of the c...
In phylogenomic analysis the collection of trees with identical score (maximum likelihood or parsimo...
The superficial resemblance of phylogenetic trees to other branching structures allows searching for...
Background: The superficial resemblance of phylogenetic trees to other branching structures allows s...
The superficial resemblance of phylogenetic trees to other branching structures allows searching for...
In phylogenomics the analysis of concatenated gene alignments, the so-called supermatrix, is commonl...
The GenBank database contains essentially all of the nucleotide sequence data generated for publishe...
<div><p>The GenBank database contains essentially all of the nucleotide sequence data generated for ...
Abstract.—Nonparamtric bootstrapping methods may be useful for assessing confidence in a supertree i...
Abstract.—Nonparamtric bootstrapping methods may be useful for assessing confidence in a supertree i...
Abstract.—We have examined the behavior of the "treeness " test for evolutionary indepen-d...