Diversity, disparity, and evolutionary rate estimation for unresolved Yule trees
Forrest W. Crawford, Marc A. Suchard

TL;DR
This paper introduces a mathematical framework for estimating evolutionary rates and diversity in unresolved phylogenetic trees using the Yule process, enabling analysis without fixed trees or simulations.
Contribution
It derives analytical expressions for trait disparity distribution under Yule trees and provides a likelihood-based method for rate estimation in unresolved clades.
Findings
Derived closed-form distribution of phylogenetic diversity.
Generalized phylogenetic disparity for Yule process.
Fast likelihood estimation of Brownian variance in unresolved trees.
Abstract
The branching structure of biological evolution confers statistical dependencies on phenotypic trait values in related organisms. For this reason, comparative macroevolutionary studies usually begin with an inferred phylogeny that describes the evolutionary relationships of the organisms of interest. The probability of the observed trait data can be computed by assuming a model for trait evolution, such as Brownian motion, over the branches of this fixed tree. However, the phylogenetic tree itself contributes statistical uncertainty to estimates of other evolutionary quantities, and many comparative evolutionary biologists regard the tree as a nuisance parameter. In this paper, we present a framework for analytically integrating over unknown phylogenetic trees in comparative evolutionary studies by assuming that the tree arises from a continuous-time Markov branching model called the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolution and Paleontology Studies · Genetic diversity and population structure · Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies
