3 research outputs found

    Constructing and counting phylogenetic invariants

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    Abstract. The method of invariants is an approach to the problem of reconstructing the phylogenetic tree of a collection of m taxa using nucleotide sequence data. Models for the respective probabilities of the 4m possible vectors of bases at a given site will have unknown parameters that describe the random mechanism by which substitution occurs along the branches of a putative phylogenetic tree. An invariant is a polynomial in these probabilities that, for a given phylogeny, is zero for all choices of the substitution mechanism parameters. If the invariantistypically non{zero for another phylogenetic tree, then estimates of the invariant can be used as evidence to support one phylogeny over another. Previous work of Evans and Speed showed that, for certain commonly used substitution models, the problem of nding a minimal generating set for the ideal of invariants can be reduced to the linear algebra problem of nding a basis for a certain lattice (that is, a free Z-module). They also conjectured that the cardinality ofsuch a generating set can be computed using a simple \degrees of freedom " formula. We verify this conjecture. Along the way, we explain in detail how the observations of Evans and Speed lead to a simple, computationally feasible algorithm for constructing a minimal generating set. 1
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