Three tree priors and five datasets: A study of the effect of tree priors in Indo-European phylogenetics
This work addresses a gap in Indo-European phylogenetics by systematically evaluating tree prior effects, though it is incremental as it applies existing methods to new analyses.
The study investigated how different tree priors affect phylogenetic inference of the Indo-European language family, finding that Uniform or Fossilized Birth-Death priors are more suitable than Coalescent priors, with root age estimates supporting the Steppe origin hypothesis in two cases.
The age of the root of the Indo-European language family has received much attention since the application of Bayesian phylogenetic methods by Gray and Atkinson(2003). The root age of the Indo-European family has tended to decrease from an age that supported the Anatolian origin hypothesis to an age that supports the Steppe origin hypothesis with the application of new models (Chang et al., 2015). However, none of the published work in the Indo-European phylogenetics studied the effect of tree priors on phylogenetic analyses of the Indo-European family. In this paper, I intend to fill this gap by exploring the effect of tree priors on different aspects of the Indo-European family's phylogenetic inference. I apply three tree priors---Uniform, Fossilized Birth-Death (FBD), and Coalescent---to five publicly available datasets of the Indo-European language family. I evaluate the posterior distribution of the trees from the Bayesian analysis using Bayes Factor, and find that there is support for the Steppe origin hypothesis in the case of two tree priors. I report the median and 95% highest posterior density (HPD) interval of the root ages for all the three tree priors. A model comparison suggested that either Uniform prior or FBD prior is more suitable than the Coalescent prior to the datasets belonging to the Indo-European language family.