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1 ared ancestry (homology) versus convergence (homoplasy).
2 level of convergent and parallel evolution (homoplasy).
3 ons at the same site and of reversion (i.e., homoplasy).
4 h have emerged repeatedly and independently (homoplasies).
5 ssed as well as the concept of developmental homoplasy.
6 , at short evolutionary distances, pervasive homoplasy.
7 confirmed that these shared STs were due to homoplasy.
8 s problematic due to high mutation rates and homoplasy.
9 dex (CI) provide relatively good measures of homoplasy.
10 of these behaviors suggests a high degree of homoplasy.
11 accounting for copy-number polymorphism and homoplasy.
12 group of monkeys argued to display extensive homoplasy.
13 with pollination mechanisms alike promoting homoplasy.
14 of 5-HT-ir neurons exhibits a great deal of homoplasy.
15 e) is characterized by extreme morphological homoplasy.
16 ustly than expected from stochastic sequence homoplasies.
17 Such characters are called homoplasies.
20 lineages to iteratively evolve developmental homoplasies and convergent ecological specializations, p
21 This pattern is likely attributable to both homoplasy and balancing selection on ancestral polymorph
23 at fail to discriminate between homology and homoplasy and further implies virus-like rates of nucleo
24 lear evidence of interspecific allele length homoplasy and microsatellite mutational saturation was o
25 onsiderable amounts of cryptic variation and homoplasy and significantly aid in our understanding of
27 etic analyses reveal that unsuspected dental homoplasy and the detrimental effects of missing data co
28 d humans) are controversial due to pervasive homoplasy and the incompleteness of the fossil record.
29 merged pathogens, but they are less prone to homoplasy and thus extremely valuable for phylogenetic a
31 cause retroposon insertions show very little homoplasy, and because the ancestral state (absence of t
32 d by factors (such as a choice of sequences, homoplasy, and different mutation rates) resulting in in
34 ta show less schismogenesis, higher rates of homoplasy, and more bursts of contact-induced change tha
35 more informative sites, were subject to less homoplasy, and provided better support for well-accepted
39 goettingensis complex by analyzing the extra homoplasy arising in hybrid genomes from the simultaneou
41 e best supported gene trees, 58% of apparent homoplasy at amino sites in the species tree is due to g
42 sis of the variable repeats shows ubiquitous homoplasy at the level of divergence represented by the
43 ecialized morphology of Lineatriton displays homoplasy at two hierarchical levels: (i) with respect t
45 x mtDNA sequence data sets show an excess of homoplasy, but this could be due to either recombination
49 on phylogenetic informativeness and risk of homoplasy clarified tribe-level relationships, which sup
50 Both of these problems, secondary loss and homoplasy, confound the interpretation of evolutionary r
53 his is not always reflected in the levels of homoplasy detected in a parsimony analysis, because high
54 ny of which coincide with known phylogenetic homoplasies, display a spectrum and patterns of purifyin
55 trongly affected by multiple hits at a site (homoplasy), especially when substitution rates are high
58 en set of genotypes admit a phylogeny with q homoplasy events, so that all the homoplasy events occur
63 h multiple alleles were sequenced, extensive homoplasy for size was uncovered both within and between
69 copies has been deemed to be an essentially homoplasy-free phylogenetic character because the probab
72 mong 162,000 preselected cases 102 virtually homoplasy-free, phylogenetically informative retroelemen
73 persed elements, which are considered nearly homoplasy-free, to elucidate the phylogeny of hominids.
76 analysis of tRNAs can help to recognize this homoplasy, improving gene-order-based phylogenetic hypot
78 ences about the probability of hemiplasy and homoplasy in large datasets that contain both ILS and in
80 ed to dentognathic (that is, jaws and teeth) homoplasy in Plio-Pleistocene hominins, and shows that s
83 roblem is posed by convergent evolution (or 'homoplasy' in genetic terminology): a feature or a molec
84 es, testing each gene fusion for evidence of homoplasy, including gene fission, convergence, and hori
85 ecause it creates patterns of substitutions (homoplasies) inconsistent with the hypothesis of a singl
87 ion using molecular data is often subject to homoplasy, leading to inaccurate conclusions about phylo
89 dex (RI), and particularly by accounting for homoplasy measured among randomised character data using
93 scendants, and strengthens the hypothesis of homoplasy of 'tribosphenic-like' molars among mammals.
94 is new eutriconodont adds to the evidence of homoplasy of vertebral characters in the thoraco-lumbar
95 history of a set of samples contain frequent homoplasies or recombination events quasi-median network
96 titution changes (e.g., those not exhibiting homoplasy or reversals) from the unambiguous branches of
97 there are more trunk vertebrae, a widespread homoplasy (parallelism) in salamanders, the genus Lineat
102 bB showing low mean compatibility scores and homoplasy ratios of 0.71 and 0.67, respectively, recombi
103 state space affects both the known levels of homoplasy (recorded during simulated evolution) and thos
104 Analysis of the mechanisms generating such homoplasy requires an independent molecular phylogeny.
106 ids, and illuminates previously-unrecognized homoplasy that complicates dromaeosaurid phylogeny and s
107 estimation of pivotal parameters, can allow homoplasy to bias these estimates and ultimately the PB-
110 Accounting for these considerable sources of homoplasy, we identified fusion characters that provide