Estimating Population Parameters using the Structured Serial Coalescent with Bayesian MCMC Inference when some Demes are Hidden
Greg Ewing1,2 and Allen Rodrigo1,2
1Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution 2Bioinformatics Institute, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand.
Abstract: Using the structured serial coalescent with Bayesian MCMC and serial samples, we estimate population size when some demes are not sampled or are hidden, ie ghost demes. It is found that even with the presence of a ghost deme, accurate inference was possible if the parameters are estimated with the true model. However with an incorrect model, estimates were biased and can be positively misleading. We extend these results to the case where there are sequences from the ghost at the last time sample. This case can arise in HIV patients, when some tissue samples and viral sequences only become available after death. When some sequences from the ghost deme are available at the last sampling time, estimation bias is reduced and accurate estimation of parameters associated with the ghost deme is possible despite sampling bias. Migration rates for this case are also shown to be good estimates when migration values are low.
Readers of this also read:
- Environmental Quality, Developmental Plasticity and the Thrifty Phenotype: A Review of Evolutionary Models
- LASER: A Maximum Likelihood Toolkit for Detecting Temporal Shifts in Diversification Rates From Molecular Phylogenies
- Total Evidence, Average Consensus and Matrix Representation with Parsimony: What a Difference Distances Make
- 3 UTR-located ALU Elements: Donors of Potetial miRNA Target Sites and Mediators of Network miRNA-based Regulatory Interactions
- Evolution of proteins and proteomes: a phylogenetics approach