PARSIMONY AND THE CHOICE BETWEEN DIFFERENT TRANSFORMATIONS FOR THE SAME CHARACTER SET
- 1 June 1991
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Cladistics
- Vol. 7 (2) , 111-139
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-0031.1991.tb00028.x
Abstract
- When phylogeneticists choose among alternative hypotheses, they choose the one that requires the fewest ad hoc assumptions, i.e. the one that is the most parsimonious. For some systematists, choosing among alternative transformation series for the same set of taxa is equivalent to attaining trees with shorter length and minimal homoplasy. Homoplasy is shown to be composed of hierarchical discordance and scattering, which are recognized and described for the first time. Neither the consistency nor retention indices can be used in assessing different theories of multistate character transformation because both are affected by the shape of the transformation series rather than the character state distribution on a tree. Fits of transformations to a tree are better assessed by comparing the transformation to the cladogram character and the nearest neighbor network. Nearest neighbor networks are graphical representations of the nearest neighbor matrix. Transformations with the closest greatest number of matches between cladogram characters and the least complexity in the nearest neighbor network are preferred. These transformations are shown to make the fewest number of ad hoc statements and hence to be the most parsimonious. A means for obtaining cladogram characters and nearest neighbor matrices using a widely distributed microcomputer program is presented.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Two Methods for Calculating Cladogram Characters: Transformation Series Analysis and the Iterative FIG/FOG MethodSystematic Zoology, 1990
- The Retention Index and Homoplasy ExcessSystematic Zoology, 1989
- Homoplasy Excess Ratios: New Indices for Measuring Levels of Homoplasy in Phylogenetic Systematics and a Critique of the Consistency IndexSystematic Zoology, 1989
- AN EMPIRICAL COMPARISON OF MICROCOMPUTER PARSIMONY PROGRAMS, IICladistics, 1989
- Fewest Variables Coding Method for Multistate CharactersSystematic Zoology, 1989
- Transformation Series AnalysisSystematic Zoology, 1982
- Philosophy and the Transformation of CladisticsSystematic Zoology, 1979
- Locating the vertices of a steiner tree in an arbitrary metric spaceMathematical Programming, 1975
- Minimum Mutation Fits to a Given TreePublished by JSTOR ,1973
- Toward Defining the Course of Evolution: Minimum Change for a Specific Tree TopologySystematic Zoology, 1971