A dissimilarity measure for semidirected networks
Semidirected networks have received interest in evolutionary biology as the appropriate generalization of unrooted trees to networks, in which some but not all edges are directed. Yet these networks lack proper theoretical study. We define here a general class of semidirected phylogenetic networks,...
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Zusammenfassung: | Semidirected networks have received interest in evolutionary biology as the
appropriate generalization of unrooted trees to networks, in which some but not
all edges are directed. Yet these networks lack proper theoretical study. We
define here a general class of semidirected phylogenetic networks, with a
stable set of leaves, tree nodes and hybrid nodes. We prove that for these
networks, if we locally choose the direction of one edge, then globally the set
of directed paths starting by this edge is stable across all choices to root
the network. We define an edge-based representation of semidirected
phylogenetic networks and use it to define a dissimilarity between networks,
which can be efficiently computed in near-quadratic time. Our dissimilarity
extends the widely-used Robinson-Foulds distance on both rooted trees and
unrooted trees. After generalizing the notion of tree-child networks to
semidirected networks, we prove that our edge-based dissimilarity is in fact a
distance on the space of tree-child semidirected phylogenetic networks. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2405.16035 |