info:eu-repo/semantics/article
On divide-and-conquer strategies for parsimony analysis of large data sets: Rec-I-dcm3 vs. TNT
Fecha
2007-12Registro en:
Goloboff, Pablo Augusto; Pol, Diego; On divide-and-conquer strategies for parsimony analysis of large data sets: Rec-I-dcm3 vs. TNT; Oxford University Press; Systematic Biology; 56; 3; 12-2007; 485-495
1063-5157
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Goloboff, Pablo Augusto
Pol, Diego
Resumen
Roshan et al. recently described a ”divide-and-conquer” technique for parsimony analysis of large datasets, Rec-I-DCM3, and stated that it compares very favorably to results using the program TNT. Their technique is based on selecting subsets of taxa to create reduced datasets or subproblems, finding most-parsimonious trees for each reduced data set, recombining all parts together, and then performing global TBR swapping on the combined tree. Here, we contrast this approach to sectorial searches, a divide-and-conquer algorithm implemented in TNT. This algorithm also uses a guide tree to create subproblems, with the first-pass state sets of the nodes that join the selected sectors with the rest of the topology; this allows exact length calculations for the entire topology (that is, any solution N steps shorter than the original, for the reduced subproblem, must also be N steps shorter for the entire topology). We show here that, for sectors of similar size analyzed with the same search algorithms, subdividing datasets with sectorial searches produces better results than subdividing with Rec-I-DCM3. Roshan et al.’s claim that Rec-I-DCM3 outperforms thetechniques in TNT was caused by a poor experimental design and algorithmic settings used for the runs in TNT. In particular, for finding trees at or very close to the minimum known length of the analyzed datasets, TNT clearly outperforms Rec-I-DCM3. Finally, we show that the performance of Rec-I-DCM3 is bound by the efficiency of TBR implementation for the complete dataset, as this method behaves (after some number of iterations) as a technique for cyclic perturbations and improvements more than as a divide-and-conquer strategy.