Quantifying the accuracy of ancestral state prediction in a phylogenetic tree under maximum parsimony
Abstract
In phylogenetic studies, biologists often wish to estimate the ancestral discrete character state at an interior vertex v of an evolutionary tree T from the states that are observed at the leaves of the tree. A simple and fast estimation method --- maximum parsimony --- takes the ancestral state at v to be any state that minimises the number of state changes in T required to explain its evolution on T. In this paper, we investigate the reconstruction accuracy of this estimation method further, under a simple symmetric model of state change, and obtain a number of new results, both for 2-state characters, and r--state characters (r>2). Our results rely on establishing new identities and inequalities, based on a coupling argument that involves a simpler `coin toss' approach to ancestral state reconstruction.
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