Quantifying the predictability of evolution by analysis of coalescent rate variation
We investigate the predictability of evolution in terms of the phylogenetic placement of new lineages. This leads us to develop a class of coalescent models that relax neutrality by allowing the rate of coalescence to vary as a continuous heritable trait. In this setting, each lineage has a relative propensity to coalesce, with coalescent odds ratios defined from the product of pairwise propensities. Estimated coalescent odds provide a statistic that captures variation in lineage growth and are informative about the strength of natural selection acting on individual lineages. A number of practical statistical methods are then developed: techniques to adjust for biased and non-uniform samplin