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Published May 2009 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Why neighbor-joining works

Abstract

We show that the neighbor-joining algorithm is a robust quartet method for constructing trees from distances. This leads to a new performance guarantee that contains Atteson's optimal radius bound as a special case and explains many cases where neighbor-joining is successful even when Atteson's criterion is not satisfied. We also provide a proof for Atteson's conjecture on the optimal edge radius of the neighbor-joining algorithm. The strong performance guarantees we provide also hold for the quadratic time fast neighbor-joining algorithm, thus providing a theoretical basis for inferring very large phylogenies with neighbor-joining.

Additional Information

© 2007 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. Received: 25 December 2006 / Accepted: 15 October 2007 / Published online: 4 December 2007. Radu Mihaescu was supported by a National Science Foundation graduate fellowship, and partially by the Fannie and John Hertz Foundation. Lior Pachter was partially supported by NIH grant R01HG2362 and NSF grant CCF0347992. Dan Levy was supported by NIH grant GM68423.

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