Deciding whether there is a single tree -a supertree- that summarizes the evolutionary information in a collection of unrooted trees is a fundamental problem in phylogenetics. We consider two versions of this question: agreement and compatibility. In the first, the supertree is required to reflect precisely the relationships among the species exhibited by the input trees. In the second, the supertree can be more refined than the input trees. Tree compatibility can be characterized in terms of the existence of a specific kind of triangulation in a structure known as the display graph. Alternatively, it can be characterized as a chordal graph sandwich problem in a structure known ...
Compatibility of phylogenetic trees is the most important concept underlying widely-used methods for...
Phylogenetic trees and networks are leaf-labelled graphs used to model evolution. Display graphs are...
A phylogenetic tree is an acyclic graph with distinctly labeled leaves, whose internal edges have a ...
Deciding whether there is a single tree -a supertree- that summarizes the evolutionary info...
Abstract. Compatibility of unrooted phylogenetic trees is a well studied problem in phylo-genetics. ...
AbstractWe characterize the compatibility of a collection of unrooted phylogenetic trees as a questi...
AbstractA collection of T1,T2,…,Tk of unrooted, leaf labelled (phylogenetic) trees, all with differe...
A collection P of phylogenetic trees is compatible if there exists a single phylogenetic tree that d...
International audienceIn phylogenetics, a central problem is to infer the evolutionary relationships...
Abstract. One of the fundamental problems in phylogeny reconstruction is combining a set of trees in...
We study two problems in computational phylogenetics. The first is tree compatibility. The input is ...
Biologists represent evolutionary history of species through phylogenetic trees. Leaves of a phyloge...
Phylogenetic trees are representations of the evolutionary descendency of a set of species. In graph...
We consider the problem of the minimum number of phylogenetic trees it would take to display all spl...
AbstractA classical problem in phylogenetic tree analysis is to decide whether there is a phylogenet...
Compatibility of phylogenetic trees is the most important concept underlying widely-used methods for...
Phylogenetic trees and networks are leaf-labelled graphs used to model evolution. Display graphs are...
A phylogenetic tree is an acyclic graph with distinctly labeled leaves, whose internal edges have a ...
Deciding whether there is a single tree -a supertree- that summarizes the evolutionary info...
Abstract. Compatibility of unrooted phylogenetic trees is a well studied problem in phylo-genetics. ...
AbstractWe characterize the compatibility of a collection of unrooted phylogenetic trees as a questi...
AbstractA collection of T1,T2,…,Tk of unrooted, leaf labelled (phylogenetic) trees, all with differe...
A collection P of phylogenetic trees is compatible if there exists a single phylogenetic tree that d...
International audienceIn phylogenetics, a central problem is to infer the evolutionary relationships...
Abstract. One of the fundamental problems in phylogeny reconstruction is combining a set of trees in...
We study two problems in computational phylogenetics. The first is tree compatibility. The input is ...
Biologists represent evolutionary history of species through phylogenetic trees. Leaves of a phyloge...
Phylogenetic trees are representations of the evolutionary descendency of a set of species. In graph...
We consider the problem of the minimum number of phylogenetic trees it would take to display all spl...
AbstractA classical problem in phylogenetic tree analysis is to decide whether there is a phylogenet...
Compatibility of phylogenetic trees is the most important concept underlying widely-used methods for...
Phylogenetic trees and networks are leaf-labelled graphs used to model evolution. Display graphs are...
A phylogenetic tree is an acyclic graph with distinctly labeled leaves, whose internal edges have a ...