[Bioperl-l] module Bio::TreeIO

Roy Chaudhuri roy.chaudhuri at gmail.com
Tue May 10 13:50:18 UTC 2016


Hi,

I can see why you were confused by the boot.phylo docs, it's not very 
clear, but it is resampling columns from an alignment.

I've uploaded a script to GitHub which does a BioPerl-based bootstrap 
analysis, maybe it will be useful for you.
https://github.com/RoyChaudhuri/bioperl-scripts/blob/master/boottree
However, I would note that BioPerl is certainly not the most efficient 
way of doing this, and neighbor-joining is not the most robust method of 
constructing a tree (more sophisticated approaches are available in 
programs such as RAxML and MrBayes).

You're right about the assess_bootstrap docs. You could post this as an 
issue on GitHub (or even better, fix it and submit a pull request):
https://github.com/bioperl/bioperl-live/issues

Cheers,
Roy.

On 10/05/2016 13:54, lskatz wrote:
> That's what I thought originally too but the R package made it look like
> there might be some magic bootstrapping going on with distances alone.  If
> there truly is no distance-matrix bootstrapping algorithm then I am left to
> my devices and at least I can make use of assess_bootstrap().
>
> By the way, if I can make a documentation bug report -- it looks like
> assess_bootstrap() only takes a list of trees as an argument but when I look
> at the source code it looks like it also can take a guide tree as a second
> parameter.  That second parameter is not in the documentation.  How would I
> specifically report that?
>
>
>
> --
> View this message in context: http://bioperl.996286.n3.nabble.com/Re-module-Bio-TreeIO-tp12257p17852.html
> Sent from the Bioperl-L mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
> _______________________________________________
> Bioperl-l mailing list
> Bioperl-l at mailman.open-bio.org
> http://mailman.open-bio.org/mailman/listinfo/bioperl-l
>


More information about the Bioperl-l mailing list