Inferring Phylogenies
(Sprache: Englisch)
Published by Sinauer Associates, an imprint of Oxford University Press.
Phylogenies (evolutionary trees) are basic to thinking about and analyzing differences between species. Statistical, computational, and algorithmic work on them has been ongoing...
Phylogenies (evolutionary trees) are basic to thinking about and analyzing differences between species. Statistical, computational, and algorithmic work on them has been ongoing...
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Published by Sinauer Associates, an imprint of Oxford University Press.
Phylogenies (evolutionary trees) are basic to thinking about and analyzing differences between species. Statistical, computational, and algorithmic work on them has been ongoing for four decades, with great advances in understanding. Yet no book has summarized this work until now. Inferring Phylogenies explains clearly the assumptions and logic of making inferences about phylogenies, and using them to make inferences about evolutionary processes. It is an essential text and reference for anyone who wants to understand how phylogenies are reconstructed and how they are used.
Phylogenies (evolutionary trees) are basic to thinking about and analyzing differences between species. Statistical, computational, and algorithmic work on them has been ongoing for four decades, with great advances in understanding. Yet no book has summarized this work until now. Inferring Phylogenies explains clearly the assumptions and logic of making inferences about phylogenies, and using them to make inferences about evolutionary processes. It is an essential text and reference for anyone who wants to understand how phylogenies are reconstructed and how they are used.
Klappentext zu „Inferring Phylogenies “
Published by Sinauer Associates, an imprint of Oxford University Press. Phylogenies (evolutionary trees) are basic to thinking about and analyzing differences between species. Statistical, computational, and algorithmic work on them has been ongoing for four decades, with great advances in understanding. Yet no book has summarized this work until now. Inferring Phylogenies explains clearly the assumptions and logic of making inferences about phylogenies, and using them to make inferences about evolutionary processes. It is an essential text and reference for anyone who wants to understand how phylogenies are reconstructed and how they are used.
As phylogenies are inferred with various kinds of data, this book concentrates on some of the central ones: discretely coded characters, molecular sequences, gene frequencies, and quantitative traits. Also covered are restriction sites, RAPDs, and microsatellites.
Inferring Phylogenies is intended for graduate-level courses, assuming some knowledge of statistics, mathematics (calculus and fundamental matrix algebra), molecular sequences, and quantitative genetics.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Inferring Phylogenies “
- 1: Parsimony methods
- 2: Counting evolutionary changes
- 3: How many trees are there?
- 4: Finding the best tree by heuristic search
- 5: Finding the best tree by branch and bound
- 6: Ancestral states and branch lengths
- 7: Variants of parsimony
- 8: Compatibility
- 9: Statistical properties of parsimony
- 10: A digression on history and philosophy
- 11: Distance matrix methods
- 12: Quartets of species
- 13: Models of DNA evolution
- 14: Models of protein evolution
- 15: Restriction sites, RAPDs, AFLPs, and microsatellites
- 16: Likelihood methods
- 17: Hadamard methods
- 18: Bayesian inference of phylogenies
- 19: Testing models, trees, and clocks
- 20: Bootstrap, jackknife, and permutation tests
- 21: Paired-sites tests
- 22: Invariants
- 23: Brownian motion and gene frequencies
- 24: Quantitative characters
- 25: Comparative methods
- 26: Coalescent trees
- 27: Likelihood calculations on coalescents
- 28: Coalescents and species trees
- 29: Alignment, gene families, and genomics
- 30: Consensus trees and distances between trees
- 31: Biogeography, hosts, and parasites
- 32: Phylogenies and paleontology
- 33: Tests based on tree shape
- 34: Drawing trees
- 35: Phylogeny software
Autoren-Porträt von Joseph Felsenstein
Joe Felsenstein is Professor in the Department of Genome Sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle, where he has taught for more than thirty years. He earned a B.S. (Honors) in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and a Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Chicago. Dr. Felsenstein is the author of the widely used PHYLIP package of programs for inferring phylogenies. He served as President of the Society for the Study of Evolution in 1993 and has received numerous awards, including: election to membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1992); the Sewall Wright Award, American Society of Naturalists (1993; election to membership in the National Academy of Sciences (1999); and the Weldon Memorial Prize, Oxford University (2000). His work has ranged from theoretical evolutionary genetics to statistical methods for inferring phylogenies.Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Joseph Felsenstein
- 2003, 2003, 580 Seiten, Maße: 17,9 x 22,8 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- ISBN-10: 0878931775
- ISBN-13: 9780878931774
Sprache:
Englisch
Pressezitat
Joe Felsenstein has had more positive influence on the statistical revolution of phylogenetics than any other researcher in the field. For that reason, many biologists view him as the father of statistical phylogenetics. It was with this in mind that I finally got my hands on his long-awaited book, Inferring Phylogenies. The short answer is: it delivers. Inferring Phylogenies is quite simply an instant classic. AJ Drummond, Heredity
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