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by oasisbob
1368 days ago
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Glad we're on the same page about the multiple techniques now. Statements you made like, "Pekar et al. do some complicated phylogenetic modeling that purports to show the MRCA in humans is too recent" and "This isn't any standard molecular clock approach. It's a byzantine stack of plausible but somewhat arbitrary assumptions" made it clear there was confusion before. Their tree is based off a couple novel modification to established techniques. Your characterizations were inaccurate and laughable. > It carries a different set of plausible but arbitrary assumptions though, again about the stochasticity/overdispersion and sampling rate of early spread, just less directly. So, you don't only have problems with the modeling of the authors, but their base phylogeny too? Do you reject their tMRCA? Good grief. I'm still looking forward to discussing the molecular phylogenetics of this paper sometime. |
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> Their former model [...] purports to independently establish tMRCA in humans too recent for significant cryptic spread.
Even if SARS-CoV-2 really entered humans in December, with minimal cryptic spread, that's still enough time for the two lineages to evolve in humans, since they're (sorry) just two SNPs apart. I believe Worobey knows this, and that's the reason why he emphasizes the "Separate introductions" model, since their polytomy thing--and not any question of time for cryptic spread--is their best and only argument to exclude that. So I was wrong to mention the tMRCA at all, since even perfect knowledge of that wouldn't tell us confidently how the two lineages arose.
The second of my statements seems correct to me. Not only is their argument for two introductions not a standard molecular clock approach, but it's not a molecular clock approach at all, since "Inferring" provides no support. Their only support comes from the polytomy thing in "Separate". This makes the accuracy of their epidemiological simulation highly relevant, thus the "hand-wringing" over that.
I'd note that you yourself referred me to "Separate", back in:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32258096
So why did you switch to "Inferring"? I guess we could discuss that too, but per above I don't believe that could provide significant support for two introductions into humans, and thus not for natural vs. research-related origin. Do you believe otherwise? Or do you just mean the approach is of general interest, independently of that question of origin?