From: Jim Procter Distance Measures Trees are calculated on the basis of a measure of similarity
between each pair of sequences in the alignment :
-
-
The percentage identity between
- the two sequences at each aligned position.
-
-
-
- This is essentially the 'number of identical bases (or
- residues) per 100 base pairs (or residues)'.
-
These options
- use one of the available substitution matrices to compute a sum of
- scores for the residue pairs at each aligned position. For details
- about each model, see the list of
- built-in score matrices.
+
-
The percentage identity
+ between the two sequences at each aligned position.
+
+
+
This is essentially the 'number of
+ identical bases (or residues) per 100 base pairs (or
+ residues)'.
+
These
+ options use one of the available substitution matrices to compute
+ a sum of scores for the residue pairs at each aligned position.
+
Trees
are constructed from a distance matrix formed from Jaccard
distances between sequence features observed at each column of the
@@ -68,7 +73,6 @@ between each pair of sequences in the alignment :
same type will be grouped together in trees computed with this
metric. This measure was introduced in Jalview 2.9
Tree Construction Methods
Jalview currently supports two kinds of agglomerative clustering methods. These are not intended to substitute for rigorous @@ -89,7 +93,6 @@ phylogenetic tree construction, and may fail on very large alignments. expensive than UPGMA. -
A newly calculated tree will be displayed in a new tree viewing window. In addition, a new entry with the same tree viewer window name will be added in the Sort