Fast algorithms for computing phylogenetic divergence time

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The inference of species divergence time is a key step in most phylogenetic studies. Methods have been available for the last ten years to perform the inference, but the performance of the methods does not yet scale well to studies with hundreds of taxa and thousands of DNA base pairs. For example a study of 349 primate taxa was estimated to require over 9 months of processing time. In this work, we present a new algorithm, AncestralAge, that significantly improves the performance of the divergence time process. RESULTS: As part of AncestralAge, we demonstrate a new method for the computation of phylogenetic likelihood and our experiments show a 90% improvement in likelihood computation time on the aforementioned dataset of 349 primates taxa with over 60,000 DNA base pairs. Additionally, we show that our new method for the computation of the Bayesian prior on node ages reduces the running time for this computation on the 349 taxa dataset by 99%. CONCLUSION: Through the use of these new algorithms we open up the ability to perform divergence time inference on large phylogenetic studies.

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Crosby, R. W., & Williams, T. L. (2017). Fast algorithms for computing phylogenetic divergence time. BMC Bioinformatics, 18, 514. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-017-1916-1

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