Multi-model approaches to phylogenetics: Implications for idealization |
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Authors: | Aja Watkins |
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Affiliation: | 1. Via Casona, 7, 40043, Marzabotto, Italy;2. IMT School for Advanced Studies, Lucca, Italy |
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Abstract: | Phylogenetic models traditionally represent the history of life as having a strictly-branching tree structure. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that the history of life is often not strictly-branching; lateral gene transfer, endosymbiosis, and hybridization, for example, can all produce lateral branching events. There is thus motivation to allow phylogenetic models to have a reticulate structure. One proposal involves the reconciliation of genealogical discordance. Briefly, this method uses patterns of disagreement – discordance – between trees of different genes to add lateral branching events to phylogenetic trees of taxa, and to estimate the most likely cause of these events. I use this practice to argue for: (1) a need for expanded accounts of multiple-models idealization, (2) a distinction between automatic and manual de-idealization, and (3) recognition that idealization may serve the meso-level aims of science in a different way than hitherto acknowledged. |
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Keywords: | Phylogenetics Idealization Genealogical discordance Lateral gene transfer Hybridization |
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