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Content archived on 2024-06-18

Countering Confounding Heterogeneity in Phylogenetics through Non-Parametric Analyses of Quartet Split Patterns

Objective

Reconstructing the historical (phylogenetic) interrelationships of biological entities (e.g. taxa, species, genes) is a substantial goal of evolutionary biology not least because knowledge of these relationships facilitates the interpretation of all comparative biological data. Due to continuing improvement of sequencing techniques and computational power within the last 20 years, molecular phylogenetic analyses have expanded steadily from single gene analyses of small taxon sets up to phylogenomic analyses of many hundreds of genes and taxa. However, this is not always a simple task – particularly when the data are subject to systematic biases that can mislead the most commonly relied upon methods. In such cases, increasing the amount of data can make recovering the correct relationships harder rather than easier. The main aim of this project is to develop and evaluate new intelligent tree reconstruction algorithms based on specific split pattern analyses among multiple sequence alignments and/or morphological character patterns that will enable a significantly more reliable and accurate reconstruction of phylogenetic trees, and ultimately the Tree of Life. The main focus is on overcoming the analytical difficulties or systematic biases resulting from branch specific heterogeneities of evolutionary substitution rates leading to the widespread analytical artefact known as Long Branch Attraction (LBA). It is anticipated that the strategies developed will have broad applicability, that they will complement existing methods and will help to resolve longstanding phylogenetic problems that appear to have been confounded by LBA. By facilitating the production of more accurate phylogenetic trees, it is expected that the new algorithms will help deliver better foundations for all branches of comparative biology. The new developed reconstruction algorithms will be implemented into an existing pipeline and thoroughly tested with both simulated and empirical data.

Call for proposal

FP7-PEOPLE-2013-IEF
See other projects for this call

Coordinator

NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
EU contribution
€ 231 283,20
Address
CROMWELL ROAD
SW7 5BD London
United Kingdom

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Region
London Inner London — West Kensington & Chelsea and Hammersmith & Fulham
Activity type
Public bodies (excluding Research Organisations and Secondary or Higher Education Establishments)
Administrative Contact
Oliver Bacon (Mr.)
Links
Total cost
No data