Inferring Heterogeneous Evolutionary Processes Through Time: from sequence substitution to phylogeography
Filip Bielejec, Philippe Lemey, Guy Baele, Andrew Rambaut, Marc A, Suchard

TL;DR
This paper introduces a flexible Bayesian epoch model for phylogenetic inference that accounts for temporal heterogeneity in substitution processes, utilizing GPU acceleration for computational efficiency, and demonstrates its effectiveness on empirical data.
Contribution
It extends existing models by allowing multiple substitution rate matrices across time, enabling more realistic evolutionary reconstructions with efficient parallel computation.
Findings
Model accurately recovers evolutionary parameters in synthetic data.
Captures temporal heterogeneity in HIV and influenza data.
Provides insights into evolutionary dynamics with improved realism.
Abstract
Molecular phylogenetic and phylogeographic reconstructions generally assume time-homogeneous substitution processes. Motivated by computational convenience, this assumption sacrifices biological realism and offers little opportunity to uncover the temporal dynamics in evolutionary histories. Here, we extend and generalize an evolutionary approach that relaxes the time-homogeneous process assumption by allowing the specification of different infinitesimal substitution rate matrices across different time intervals, called epochs, along the evolutionary history. We focus on an epoch model implementation in a Bayesian inference framework that offers great modeling flexibility in drawing inference about any discrete data type characterized as a continuous-time Markov chain, including phylogeographic traits. To alleviate the computational burden that the additional temporal heterogeneity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies · Genetic diversity and population structure · Evolution and Paleontology Studies
