A Relaxed Drift Diffusion Model for Phylogenetic Trait Evolution
Mandev S. Gill, Lam Si Tung Ho, Guy Baele, Philippe Lemey, and Marc A., Suchard

TL;DR
This paper introduces a relaxed drift diffusion model for phylogenetic trait evolution that allows branch-specific drift rates, improving the modeling of trait evolution in molecular phylogenetics.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel Bayesian framework for a relaxed drift diffusion model that captures branch-specific variation in trait evolution, enhancing accuracy over standard models.
Findings
Better reconstruction of viral dispersal dynamics in HIV-1 and West Nile virus.
Detection of continuous drift towards increased HIV-1 resistance.
Model demonstrates improved fit over traditional Brownian diffusion.
Abstract
Understanding the processes that give rise to quantitative measurements associated with molecular sequence data remains an important issue in statistical phylogenetics. Examples of such measurements include geographic coordinates in the context of phylogeography and phenotypic traits in the context of comparative studies. A popular approach is to model the evolution of continuously varying traits as a Brownian diffusion process. However, standard Brownian diffusion is quite restrictive and may not accurately characterize certain trait evolutionary processes. Here, we relax one of the major restrictions of standard Brownian diffusion by incorporating a nontrivial estimable drift into the process. We introduce a relaxed drift diffusion model for the evolution of multivariate continuously varying traits along a phylogenetic tree via Brownian diffusion with drift. Notably, the relaxed drift…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV Research and Treatment · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies
