Dataset
Data from: Verbalizing phylogenomic conflict: representation of node congruence across competing reconstructions of the neoavian explosion
14 Sep 2019
Abstract
Phylogenomic research is accelerating the publication of landmark studies
that aim to resolve deep divergences of major organismal groups.
Meanwhile, systems for identifying and integrating the products of
phylogenomic inference–such as newly supported clade concepts–have not
kept pace. However, the ability to verbalize node concept congruence and
conflict across multiple, in effect simultaneously endorsed phylogenomic
hypotheses, is a prerequisite for building synthetic data environments for
biological systematics and other domains impacted by these conflicting
inferences. Here we develop a novel solution to the conflict verbalization
challenge, based on a logic representation and reasoning approach that
utilizes the language of Region Connection Calculus (RCC–5) to produce
consistent alignments of node concepts endorsed by incongruent
phylogenomic studies. The approach employs clade concept labels to
individuate concepts used by each source, even if these carry identical
names. Indirect RCC–5 modeling of intensional (property-based) node
concept definitions, facilitated by the local relaxation of coverage
constraints, allows parent concepts to attain congruence in spite of their
differentially sampled children. To demonstrate the feasibility of this
approach, we align two recent phylogenomic reconstructions of higher-level
avian groups that entail strong conflict in the "neoavian
explosion" region. According to our representations, this conflict is
constituted by 26 instances of input "whole concept" overlap.
These instances are further resolvable in the output labeling schemes and
visualizations as "split concepts", which provide the labels and
relations needed to build truly synthetic phylogenomic data environments.
Because the RCC–5 alignments fundamentally reflect the trained,
logic-enabled judgments of systematic experts, future designs for such
environments need to promote a culture where experts routinely assess the
intensionalities of node concepts published by our peers–even and
especially when we are not in agreement with each other.
Metrics
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Details
- Title
- Data from: Verbalizing phylogenomic conflict: representation of node congruence across competing reconstructions of the neoavian explosion
- Creators
- Nico M. Franz - Arizona State UniversityLukas J. Musher - Adler Graduate SchoolJoseph W. Brown - University of SheffieldYu Shizhuo - University of California, DavisBertram Ludäscher - University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- Publisher
- Dryad
- Grant note
- DEB-1155984 / National Science Foundation (https://ror.org/021nxhr62)
- Resource Type
- Dataset
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Ornithology
- Other Identifier
- 991022048370204721