Dynamic Ising Model: Reconstruction of Evolutionary Trees
Quantitative Methods
2013-08-26 v2 Populations and Evolution
Abstract
An evolutionary tree is a cascade of bifurcations starting from a single common root, generating a growing set of daughter species as time goes by. Species here is a general denomination for biological species, spoken languages or any other entity evolving through heredity. From the N currently alive species within a clade, distances are measured through pairwise comparisons made by geneticists, linguists, etc. The larger is such a distance for a pair of species, the older is their last common ancestor. The aim is to reconstruct the past unknown bifurcations, i.e. the whole clade, from the knowledge of the N(N-1)/2 quoted distances taken for granted. A mechanical method is presented, and its applicability discussed.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1303.4303,
title = {Dynamic Ising Model: Reconstruction of Evolutionary Trees},
author = {Paulo Murilo Castro de Oliveira},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1303.4303},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
8 pages, 4 figures