Paper List
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A Theoretical Framework for the Formation of Large Animal Groups: Topological Coordination, Subgroup Merging, and Velocity Inheritance
This paper addresses the core problem of how large, coordinated animal groups form in nature, challenging the classical view of gradual aggregation by...
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CONFIDE: Hallucination Assessment for Reliable Biomolecular Structure Prediction and Design
This paper addresses the critical limitation of current protein structure prediction models (like AlphaFold3) where high-confidence scores (pLDDT) can...
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Generative design and validation of therapeutic peptides for glioblastoma based on a potential target ATP5A
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in therapeutic peptide design: how to efficiently optimize lead peptides with geometric constraints while...
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Pharmacophore-based design by learning on voxel grids
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck and limited novelty in conventional pharmacophore-based virtual screening by introducing a voxel cap...
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Human-Centred Evaluation of Text-to-Image Generation Models for Self-expression of Mental Distress: A Dataset Based on GPT-4o
This paper addresses the critical gap in evaluating how AI-generated images can effectively support cross-cultural mental distress communication, part...
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ANNE Apnea Paper
This paper addresses the core challenge of achieving accurate, event-level sleep apnea detection and characterization using a non-intrusive, multimoda...
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DeeDeeExperiment: Building an infrastructure for integrating and managing omics data analysis results in R/Bioconductor
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of managing and organizing the growing volume of differential expression and functional enrichment analys...
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Cross-Species Antimicrobial Resistance Prediction from Genomic Foundation Models
This paper addresses the core challenge of predicting antimicrobial resistance across phylogenetically distinct bacterial species, where traditional m...
SDSR: A Spectral Divide-and-Conquer Approach for Species Tree Reconstruction
Hebrew University of Jerusalem | Weizmann Institute of Science | Tel Aviv University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the computational bottleneck in reconstructing species trees from thousands of species and multiple genes by introducing a scalable spectral divide-and-conquer framework that maintains accuracy while dramatically reducing runtime.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a spectral graph theory-based partitioning method using the Fiedler eigenvector of averaged gene Laplacian matrices to recursively divide species into biologically meaningful clans.
- Theory Provides theoretical guarantees of asymptotic consistency under the Multispecies Coalescent (MSC) model and finite-sample bounds for accurate partitioning.
- Methodology Develops a deterministic merging strategy based on outgroup rooting that avoids NP-hard optimization problems common in supertree methods.
主要结论
- SDSR combined with CA-ML achieves up to 10-fold faster runtime on 200-species datasets with 100 genes while maintaining comparable accuracy to full-data CA-ML.
- The algorithm provides O(m²) complexity for partitioning/merging steps and reduces the dominant reconstruction term from O(Km²n) to O(Kτmn), where τ is the threshold size.
- Theoretical analysis proves SDSR is asymptotically consistent under the MSC model with infinite genes, and partitions species into disjoint clans of the true species tree.
摘要: Recovering a tree that represents the evolutionary history of a group of species is a key task in phylogenetics. Performing this task using sequence data from multiple genetic markers poses two key challenges. The first is the discordance between the evolutionary history of individual genes and that of the species. The second challenge is computational, as contemporary studies involve thousands of species. Here we present SDSR, a scalable divide-and-conquer approach for species tree reconstruction based on spectral graph theory. The algorithm recursively partitions the species into subsets until their sizes are below a given threshold. The trees of these subsets are reconstructed by a user-chosen species tree algorithm. Finally, these subtrees are merged to form the full tree. On the theoretical front, we derive recovery guarantees for SDSR, under the multispecies coalescent (MSC) model. We also perform a runtime complexity analysis. We show that SDSR, when combined with a species tree reconstruction algorithm as a subroutine, yields substantial runtime savings as compared to applying the same algorithm on the full data. Empirically, we evaluate SDSR on synthetic benchmark datasets with incomplete lineage sorting and horizontal gene transfer. In accordance with our theoretical analysis, the simulations show that combining SDSR with common species tree methods, such as CA-ML or ASTRAL, yields up to 10-fold faster runtimes. In addition, SDSR achieves a comparable tree reconstruction accuracy to that obtained by applying these methods on the full data.