A Mathematical Primer of Molecular Phylogenetics

Author:   Xuhua Xia
Publisher:   Apple Academic Press Inc.
ISBN:  

9781774630068


Pages:   366
Publication Date:   31 March 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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A Mathematical Primer of Molecular Phylogenetics


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Author:   Xuhua Xia
Publisher:   Apple Academic Press Inc.
Imprint:   Apple Academic Press Inc.
Weight:   0.721kg
ISBN:  

9781774630068


ISBN 10:   1774630060
Pages:   366
Publication Date:   31 March 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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"""Gives the lay of the land in computing on DNA sequence data to reconstruct evolutionary history. The volume sensibly progresses from aligning raw sequences with one another to the models that describe their mutations and onwards to the construction of phylogenetic trees from these data, with the nuts and bolts of each method described and exemplified along the way. Professor Xia doesn’t shy away from challenging us; for example, where he treats the application of affine functions in alignment algorithms, he warns us that this is something ‘only a very good student can understand.’ Yet his explanations are so concrete and laced with pseudocode and references to real-world implementations that they invite the reader to experiment and figure out what’s going on. The Primer is geared towards researchers who are familiar with the tools and methods of the field but who now, finally, want to know how they actually work and be able to implement them by themselves. For this audience, Xia’s work compares favorably where there is overlap in subject matter with Felsenstein’s Inferring Phylogenies. For example, where the Farris algorithm is described in prose by Felsenstein, Xia helpfully describes possible implementations (using bitmasks, as connoisseurs will understand). Along the way, the reader is treated to illustrative anecdotes and the occasional, charming Canadianism: the code samples in the book are provided in MAPLE, which, we are told, is ‘a beautiful Canadian product.’ The same could be said about the Primer, and I wish it had been around when I was a graduate student."" Dr. Rutger Vos, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, The Netherlands"


Gives the lay of the land in computing on DNA sequence data to reconstruct evolutionary history. The volume sensibly progresses from aligning raw sequences with one another to the models that describe their mutations and onwards to the construction of phylogenetic trees from these data, with the nuts and bolts of each method described and exemplified along the way. Professor Xia doesn't shy away from challenging us; for example, where he treats the application of affine functions in alignment algorithms, he warns us that this is something 'only a very good student can understand.' Yet his explanations are so concrete and laced with pseudocode and references to real-world implementations that they invite the reader to experiment and figure out what's going on. The Primer is geared towards researchers who are familiar with the tools and methods of the field but who now, finally, want to know how they actually work and be able to implement them by themselves. For this audience, Xia's work compares favorably where there is overlap in subject matter with Felsenstein's Inferring Phylogenies. For example, where the Farris algorithm is described in prose by Felsenstein, Xia helpfully describes possible implementations (using bitmasks, as connoisseurs will understand). Along the way, the reader is treated to illustrative anecdotes and the occasional, charming Canadianism: the code samples in the book are provided in MAPLE, which, we are told, is 'a beautiful Canadian product.' The same could be said about the Primer, and I wish it had been around when I was a graduate student. Dr. Rutger Vos, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, The Netherlands


Gives the lay of the land in computing on DNA sequence data to reconstruct evolutionary history. The volume sensibly progresses from aligning raw sequences with one another to the models that describe their mutations and onwards to the construction of phylogenetic trees from these data, with the nuts and bolts of each method described and exemplified along the way. Professor Xia doesn't shy away from challenging us; for example, where he treats the application of affine functions in alignment algorithms, he warns us that this is something 'only a very good student can understand.' Yet his explanations are so concrete and laced with pseudocode and references to real-world implementations that they invite the reader to experiment and figure out what's going on. The Primer is geared towards researchers who are familiar with the tools and methods of the field but who now, finally, want to know how they actually work and be able to implement them by themselves. For this audience, Xia's work compares favorably where there is overlap in subject matter with Felsenstein's Inferring Phylogenies. For example, where the Farris algorithm is described in prose by Felsenstein, Xia helpfully describes possible implementations (using bitmasks, as connoisseurs will understand). Along the way, the reader is treated to illustrative anecdotes and the occasional, charming Canadianism: the code samples in the book are provided in MAPLE, which, we are told, is 'a beautiful Canadian product.' The same could be said about the Primer, and I wish it had been around when I was a graduate student. Dr. Rutger Vos, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, The Netherlands


Author Information

Xuhua Xia, PhD, has been a professor of biology at the University of Ottawa, Canada, since 2009. Prior to that, he was an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong in 1996, and served in 2001 as a senior scientist and head of Bioinformatics Laboratory in the then-newly established HKU-Pasteur Research Centre.

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