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Using Information Theory to Detect Rogue Taxa and Improve Consensus Trees

Martin R. Smith

2021Systematic Biology32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

"Rogue" taxa of uncertain affinity can confound attempts to summarize the results of phylogenetic analyses. Rogues reduce resolution and support values in consensus trees, potentially obscuring strong evidence for relationships between other taxa. Information theory provides a principled means of assessing the congruence between a set of trees and their consensus, allowing rogue taxa to be identified more effectively than when using ad hoc measures of tree quality. A basic implementation of this approach in R recovers reduced consensus trees that are better resolved, more accurate, and more informative than those generated by existing methods. [Consensus trees; information theory; phylogenetic software; Rogue taxa.].

Topics & Concepts

TaxonPhylogenetic treeBiologyCongruence (geometry)Set (abstract data type)Tree (set theory)Tree of life (biology)Evolutionary biologyEcologyComputer scienceMathematicsCombinatoricsGeneticsGeometryGeneProgramming languageEvolution and Paleontology StudiesGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesGenetic diversity and population structure
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