Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology)
Original Article

Detection of adaptive shifts on phylogenies by using shifted stochastic processes on a tree

Paul Bastide

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: paul.bastide@agroparistech.fr

AgroParisTech, Paris

Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Jouy‐en‐Josas and Paris

Université Paris‐Saclay, France

Address for correspondence: Paul Bastide, Unités Mixtes de Recherche 518 ‘Mathématiques et Informatique Appliquées’, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique–AgroParisTech, 16 rue Claude Bernard, Paris F‐75231, France. E‐mail: paul.bastide@agroparistech.frSearch for more papers by this author
Mahendra Mariadassou

Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Jouy‐en‐Josas and Paris

Université Paris‐Saclay, France

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Stéphane Robin

AgroParisTech, Paris

Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Jouy‐en‐Josas and Paris

Université Paris‐Saclay, France

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First published: 30 September 2016
Citations: 9
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Summary

  Comparative and evolutive ecologists are interested in the distribution of quantitative traits between related species. The classical framework for these distributions consists of a random process running along the branches of a phylogenetic tree relating the species. We consider shifts in the process parameters, which reveal fast adaptation to changes of ecological niches. We show that models with shifts are not identifiable in general. Constraining the models to be parsimonious in the number of shifts partially alleviates the problem but several evolutionary scenarios can still provide the same joint distribution for the extant species. We provide a recursive algorithm to enumerate all the equivalent scenarios and to count the number of effectively different scenarios. We introduce an incomplete‐data framework and develop a maximum likelihood estimation procedure based on the expectation–maximization algorithm. Finally, we propose a model selection procedure, based on the cardinal of effective scenarios, to estimate the number of shifts and for which we prove an oracle inequality.