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2005 IEEE Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference (CSB'05)
Reconstructing Phylogenetic Networks Using Maximum Parsimony
Stanford, California
August 08-August 11
ISBN: 0-7695-2344-7
Luay Nakhleh, Rice University
Guohua Jin, Rice University
Fengmei Zhao, Rice University
John Mellor-Crummey, Rice University

Phylogenies — the evolutionary histories of groups of organisms — are one of the most widely used tools throughout the life sciences, as well as objects of research within systematics, evolutionary biology, epidemiology, etc. Almost every tool devised to date to reconstruct phylogenies produces trees; yet it is widely understood and accepted that trees oversimplify the evolutionary histories of many groups of organims, most prominently bacteria (because of horizontal gene transfer) and plants (because of hybrid speciation).

Various methods and criteria have been introduced for phylogenetic tree reconstruction. Parsimony is one of the most widely used and studied criteria, and various accurate and efficient heuristics for reconstructing trees based on parsimony have been devised. Jotun Hein suggested a straightforward extension of the parsimony criterion to phylogenetic networks. In this paper we formalize this concept, and provide the first experimental study of the quality of parsimony as a criterion for constructing and evaluating phylogenetic networks. Our results show that, when extended to phylogenetic networks, the parsimony criterion produces promising results. In a great majority of the cases in our experiments, the parsimony criterion accurately predicts the numbers and placements of non-tree events.

Index Terms:
phylogenetic networks, maximum parsimony, horizontal gene transfer
Citation:
Luay Nakhleh, Guohua Jin, Fengmei Zhao, John Mellor-Crummey, "Reconstructing Phylogenetic Networks Using Maximum Parsimony," csb, pp.93-102, 2005 IEEE Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference (CSB'05), 2005
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