Estimating effective population size changes from preferentially sampled genetic sequences

03/28/2019
by   Michael D. Karcher, et al.
0

Coalescent theory combined with statistical modeling allows us to estimate effective population size fluctuations from molecular sequences of individuals sampled from a population of interest. When sequences are sampled serially through time and the distribution of the sampling times depends on the effective population size, explicit statistical modeling of sampling times improves population size estimation. Previous work assumed that the genealogy relating sampled sequences is known and modeled sampling times as an inhomogeneous Poisson process with log-intensity equal to a linear function of the log-transformed effective population size. We improve this approach in two ways. First, we extend the method to allow for joint Bayesian estimation of the genealogy, effective population size trajectory, and other model parameters. Next, we improve the sampling time model by incorporating additional sources of information in the form of time-varying covariates. We validate our new modeling framework using a simulation study and apply our new methodology to analyses of population dynamics of seasonal influenza and to the recent Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
09/04/2020

Adaptive preferential sampling in phylodynamics

Longitudinal molecular data of rapidly evolving viruses and pathogens pr...
research
08/30/2023

Semiparametric inference of effective reproduction number dynamics from wastewater pathogen surveillance data

Concentrations of pathogen genomes measured in wastewater have recently ...
research
04/14/2020

The Tajima heterochronous n-coalescent: inference from heterochronously sampled molecular data

The observed sequence variation at a locus informs about the evolutionar...
research
11/15/2017

Exact Limits of Inference in Coalescent Models

Recovery of population size history from sequence data and testing of hy...
research
12/29/2021

Modeling Homophily in Dynamic Networks with Application to HIV Molecular Surveillance

This paper describes a novel approach to modeling homphily, i.e. the ten...
research
08/10/2022

Population Size Estimation for Respondent-Driven Sampling and Capture-Recapture: A Unifying Framework

This paper deals with the estimation of population sizes for respondent-...
research
12/10/2022

Dynamic Population Models with Temporal Preferential Sampling to Infer Phenology

To study population dynamics, ecologists and wildlife biologists use rel...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset