Order distances and split systems
Abstract
Given a distance on a finite set with elements, it is interesting to understand how the ranking obtained by ordering the elements in according to increasing distance from , varies with different choices of . The order distance is a distance on associated to which quantifies these variations, where are parameters that control how ties in the rankings are handled. The order distance of a distance has been intensively studied in case is a treelike distance (that is, arises as the shortest path distances in an edge-weighted tree with leaves labeled by ), but relatively little is known about properties of for general . In this paper we study the order distance for various types of distances that naturally generalize treelike distances in that they can be generated by split systems, i.e. they are examples of so-called -distances. In particular we show how and to what extent properties of the split systems associated to the distances that we study can be used to infer properties of .
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1910.10119,
title = {Order distances and split systems},
author = {Vincent Moulton and Andreas Spillner},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1910.10119},
year = {2019}
}