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Ancestral Features of Multitype Branching Trees
Probability| Speaker: | Lea Popovic, Concordia University |
| Location: | 2112 MSB |
| Start time: | Wed, May 7 2014, 12:00AM |
Description
Evolutionary biologists use phylogenetic trees of extant species
to study the branching process that gave rise to these species. A fair
amount is known about the probability distribution of ancestral trees
derived from single type branching processes, while much less is known
about the same objects for multi-type ones. I will describe an algorithmic
way to construct an ancestral tree of the standing population of a
multi-type
branching process in terms of a Markov chain (of vectors of types and
multiplicities). This construction allows one to get explicit formulae
for calculating: (a) statistical features that describe the shape of
the tree (the law of coalescence times together with types on the
ancestral lineages), and (b) statistical features that link types in
the standing population with the shape of the tree (the law of same-type
coalescence times). Explicit calculations can be used to compare the effect
that different branching mechanisms have on the distributions of ancestral
trees. I will illustrate this in a simple example of two-type process with
completely asymmetrical vs symmetrical probabilities of offspring types.
