Academic and Scholarly Events

  • 11/29 Statistics Colloquium, Prof. Amy Willis

    STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM

     

    Amy Willis, Assistant Professor

    Department of Biostatistics

    University of Washington

     

    Confidence sets for phylogenetic trees

     

    Abstract

     

    Phylogenetic trees represent evolutionary histories and have many important applications in biology, anthropology and criminology. The branching structure of the tree encodes the order of evolutionary divergence, and the branch lengths denote the time between divergence events. The target of interest in phylogenetic tree inference is high-dimensional, but the real challenge is that both the discrete (tree topology) and continuous (branch lengths) components need to be estimated. While decomposing inference on the topology and branch lengths has been historically popular, the mathematical and algorithmic developments of the last 15 years have provided a new framework for holistically treating uncertainty in tree inference. I will discuss how we can leverage these developments to construct a confidence set for the Fréchet mean of a distribution with support on the space of phylogenetic trees. The sets have good coverage and are efficient to compute. I will conclude by applying the procedure to revisit an HIV forensics investigation, and to assess our confidence in the geographical origins of the Zika virus. 

     

     



    DATE:  Wednesday, November 29, 2017

    TIME:    4:00 pm

    PLACE: Philip E. Austin Bldg., Rm. 105

     

    Coffee will be served at 3:30 pm in the Noether Lounge (AUST 326)

    For more information, contact: Tracy Burke at tracy.burke@uconn.edu