Mode Estimation in the Space of Phylogenetic Trees with Applications to Species Tree Reconstruction
- Date
- June 11 (Thu) 13:00 - 14:00, 2026 (JST)
- Speaker
-
- Yuki Takazawa (Project Research Associate, Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, The University of Tokyo)
- Venue
- Seminar Room #359 (Main Venue)
- via Zoom
- Language
- English
- Host
- Sungsik Kong
Analyzing samples of phylogenetic trees arises in many settings, including bootstrap tree sets, Bayesian posterior samples, and collections of gene trees. The Billera–Holmes–Vogtmann (BHV) tree space provides a geometric framework in which such samples can be viewed as point clouds in a common metric space. A fundamental summary in this space is the Fréchet mean, but it has a property known as stickiness: mean trees tend to lie on lower-dimensional boundaries of the space, corresponding to unresolved, non-binary trees. This behavior can be undesirable, as the mean may then fail to represent the center of interest.
In this talk, I will introduce the BHV tree space framework and discuss mode estimation as an alternative way to summarize distributions of phylogenetic trees. After motivating the use of the mode, I will present simple approaches to mode estimation and discuss their consistency and robustness properties. I will then discuss how these ideas can be applied to species tree reconstruction from conflicting gene trees. To handle larger taxon sets, I will use quartet-based aggregation, in which local modal summaries are constructed from trees restricted to sets of four taxa and then combined to reconstruct a species tree. This approach provides a scalable way to apply mode estimation to trees with many taxa and helps reduce the influence of contamination in gene tree collections, as illustrated in simulation studies.
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