Friday, January 30, 2015

Annotated Bibliography part 2

Here's part 2 of my annotated bibliography:

Jarvis, Erich, and Siavash Mirarab. "Whole-genome Analyses Resolve Early Branches in the Tree of Life of Modern Birds." Science 346, no. 6215 (2015): 1320.

I discussed this article earlier in my blog. The paper summarizes the findings of a research project in which scientists performed a genome-scale phylogenetic analysis of 48 bird species. It outlines the various programs the scientists used to perform the analysis, and explains the research methods quite thoroughly. This article will serve as a great resource for explaining some of the current phylogenetic research, and the paper's explanation of this team's analysis will likely help my mentor and me as we perform our own phylogenetic analysis on the San Diego zoo data. 

Huelsenbeck, John, Bruce Rannala, and John Masly. "An Introduction to Bayesian Inference of Phylogeny." Science.

My mentor shared this article with me. It's a very in-depth explanation of Bayesian Inference, which is a statistical method used to analyze evolutionary trees. The paper gives several examples of how to apply BI to evolutionary problems, and I think it will help me as I use BI to analyze the San Diego Zoo data. 
Drummond, Alexei J, and Andrew Rambaut. "BEAST: Bayesian Evolutionary Analysis by Sampling Trees." BMC Evolutionary Biology: 214.

My mentor and I will be using the BEAST program to perform our analysis, which uses Bayesian Inference to create the phylogenetic trees (as opposed to Maximum Likelihood or Parsimony). This article uses statistical and evolutionary principles to explain how the program works, and compares it to other existing programs that use Bayesian Inference. It will help me understand how to use BEAST, and will also help me understand the principles and assumptions that the program is built on.

"Analysing BEAST Output." Analysing BEAST Output. Accessed January 30, 2015. http://beast.bio.ed.ac.uk/analysing-beast-output.

This is a simple tutorial for BEAST. It actually takes you step-by-step through the BEAST program, providing helpful screenshots and including lots of detail about how the program works. This particular tutorial teaches you how to analyze BEAST output. 

1 comment:

  1. These seem like great references. They should prove very useful for your final presentation.

    You should have more posts by now. Remember that you need to write one for each week, even if you do not visit with your mentor.

    ReplyDelete