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A Practical Guide to Phylogenetics for Nonexperts
12:00

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Published on: February 5, 2014

Phylogenetic estimation with partial likelihood tensors.

J G Sumner1, M A Charleston

  • 1School of Information Technologies, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. jsumner@utas.edu.au

Journal of Theoretical Biology
|October 14, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study introduces a novel method using partial likelihood tensors for faster molecular phylogenetics calculations. This approach offers significant computational savings compared to standard methods for phylogenetic tree reconstruction.

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Area of Science:

  • Computational Biology
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Bioinformatics

Background:

  • Molecular phylogenetics relies on calculating likelihoods to infer evolutionary relationships.
  • Felsenstein's approach uses partial likelihood vectors, which can be computationally intensive.
  • Efficient algorithms are crucial for analyzing large phylogenetic datasets.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To present an alternative and computationally efficient method for calculating likelihoods in molecular phylogenetics.
  • To introduce partial likelihood tensors as a generalization of existing methods.
  • To demonstrate significant computational savings through the proposed approach.

Main Methods:

  • Developed a method based on partial likelihood tensors.
  • Utilized lexicographic sorting in conjunction with partial likelihood tensors.
  • Compared computational requirements against standard phylogenetic approaches.

Main Results:

  • The proposed method achieves significant computational savings.
  • Demonstrated efficiency on a range of simulated phylogenetic data.
  • Enumerated all numerical calculations for comparison with the standard approach.

Conclusions:

  • Partial likelihood tensors offer a viable and efficient alternative for phylogenetic likelihood calculations.
  • The method provides substantial computational benefits for molecular phylogenetics.
  • This advancement can accelerate the analysis of evolutionary relationships.